$2,160/mo
Mid-level graphic designer rate
HIRE A GRAPHIC DESIGNER IN PERU
A mid-level graphic designer in Peru runs about $2,160 a month, roughly 66% below the fully loaded cost of the same hire in the US, while overlapping your working day within zero to one hour of US time zones. A graphic designer produces the brand assets, social creative, ad variations, decks, and marketing collateral that keep your channels fed and on brand.
Peru sits on US Eastern time with no daylight saving and one of the more affordable cost profiles in the region, which stretches a budget while keeping full daytime overlap. Marketing teams burn out on the choice between slow freelancer queues and a US design salary for what is steady production work. A nearshore graphic designer gives you a dedicated forty-hour week on your time zone, so feedback happens live instead of over days, at a rate that costs less than many teams spend on one-off freelance projects.
At a glance
Key planning figures for a full-time nearshore graphic designer in Peru, drawn from the same data behind the LavaStaff free tools.
$2,160/mo
Mid-level graphic designer rate
66% under US
Versus a US hire
0 to 1 hr offset
US time zone overlap
B1 avg
English level (low)
Why nearshore
Why Peru
Peru sits on US Eastern time with no daylight saving and one of the more affordable cost profiles in the region, which stretches a budget while keeping full daytime overlap.
Why nearshore for this role
Marketing teams burn out on the choice between slow freelancer queues and a US design salary for what is steady production work. A nearshore graphic designer gives you a dedicated forty-hour week on your time zone, so feedback happens live instead of over days, at a rate that costs less than many teams spend on one-off freelance projects.
Cost by seniority
Junior, mid-level, and senior graphic designer pay in Peru, with the matching US cost for context. Figures use the same per-country cost data as the LavaStaff calculators.
| Decision point | Monthly | Annual | Hourly | Savings vs US |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Junior (0 to 2 years) | $1,555/mo | $18,660 | $9/hr | 66% |
| Mid level (3 to 5 years) | $2,160/mo | $25,920 | $12.5/hr | 66% |
| Senior (6 or more years) | $3,197/mo | $38,364 | $18.4/hr | 66% |
Junior: Learning the role, strong on fundamentals, needs clear direction. Mid level: Works independently, owns recurring outcomes, light oversight. Senior: Sets the standard, mentors others, handles ambiguity well. Run an exact figure through the hiring cost calculator or salary guide.
The role
The core responsibilities of a graphic designer, so you can scope the hire before you post it.
Produce landing page graphics, one-pagers, email headers, and sales collateral that stay consistent with your brand system.
Turn out the steady stream of social posts and ad variations that paid and organic channels consume every week.
Design investor decks, sales decks, and webinar materials that look like a design team touched them, because one did.
Keep templates, files, and brand libraries organized in Figma or Adobe tools so anyone on the team can find and reuse work.
Hiring facts
Time zone, English, and employment context for a graphic designer in Peru.
English proficiency
Peru sits at a B1 national average on the EF EPI style English index, a low band, and the hireable professional pool typically tests around B1 to B2. National scores cover everyone, while the urban, university-educated professionals you hire from usually test one to two bands above the average. Screen for the specific level the role needs and you will find strong bilingual candidates.
Time zone fit
On coverage, Peru sits within zero to one hour of US time zones, so a graphic designer overlaps your full working day. Check your exact overlap with the time zone overlap calculator and compare English across markets on the English proficiency tool.
What to screen for
Three things worth confirming during vetting for a Peruvian graphic designer.
Judge the portfolio against the work you actually need, whether that is performance ad creative, brand identity, or product marketing, since those are different skills.
Run a short paid test brief and watch the revision loop. Production design lives on fast, ego-free iteration more than on any single first draft.
Confirm depth in the tools your team uses, usually Figma plus the Adobe suite, and motion basics if video or animated ads are in scope.
Compliance
What sits on top of base salary when you employ a graphic designer in Peru.
30 calendar days in the first full year, plus about 16 national public holidays. 30 calendar days of paid vacation after one year, which can be split by agreement, with a minimum continuous block of 15 days.
Gratificaciones (July and December): roughly 2 extra months of pay per year, about a 16.7% uplift on annual salary. Paid in the first half of July and the first half of December.
Statutory no-cause severance in Peru is predictable and worth budgeting up front. 1.5 months of pay per year of service, capped at 12 months. Peru carries the highest per-year severance rate in the region, so longer tenures grow quickly until the 12 month cap is reached.
How to hire
Pick the engagement model that fits the role, the timeline, and how much overhead you want to own.
Engage a graphic designer in Peru as an independent contractor for the fastest start and the most flexibility. Best for short projects and trials where you manage the relationship directly.
Hire through an employer of record to put a Peru graphic designer on a compliant local employment contract without opening your own entity. Best for long-term, full-time roles.
Let LavaStaff source, vet, contract, and run payroll for your Peru graphic designer on a single monthly plan, so you get the talent without the recruiting, compliance, and HR overhead.
FAQ
A mid-level graphic designer in Peru runs about $2,160 a month ($25,920 a year) on a fully loaded LavaStaff plan, roughly 66% below the $77,000 it typically costs to employ the same role in the US. Junior and senior bands scale around that figure, as the seniority table on this page shows.
Yes. Peru sits within zero to one hour of US time zones, so a graphic designer covers your working day, joins live meetings, and responds in real time rather than on an overnight delay.
Freelancers price per project and queue your work behind other clients, which makes every request a negotiation. A dedicated nearshore designer learns your brand once, works only on your queue, and turns feedback around the same day, so cost per asset drops as volume grows.
Yes. Because the designer works your business hours, creative reviews happen on a call with screens shared, and revisions often ship the same afternoon instead of crossing an overnight gap.
LavaStaff sources and vets candidates, handles compliant contracting and payroll in Peru, and folds local leave, bonuses, and contributions into one transparent monthly rate, so there are no surprise costs on top of the number you budget. Send a short role brief and you are matched with vetted graphic designers.
Keep exploring
Ready To Move
Send LavaStaff a short role brief and get matched with vetted Peruvian graphic designers, with contracting and payroll handled for you at the rate you just budgeted.