Independent Contractor vs Employee Classification
Worker classification — employee or independent contractor — controls who pays payroll taxes, who's eligible for employment-law protections, who carries workers' comp, and who can claim back wages and benefits. The label on the contract doesn't decide it; multiple government agencies apply different tests, and getting the answer wrong is the most common and most expensive labor-side legal exposure for small and mid-size US businesses.
Why classification matters
Employees trigger employer obligations that contractors don't: employer-side payroll taxes (FICA, FUTA, state unemployment), tax withholding, workers' comp coverage, unemployment eligibility, eligibility for benefits, wage-and-hour protections (FLSA minimum wage and overtime), FMLA and other leave, anti-discrimination coverage, expense reimbursement (in some states), and the right to organize. Independent contractors get none of these from the engaging business; they handle their own taxes (paying self-employment tax instead of employee FICA), buy their own insurance, and absorb their own business expenses.
The financial difference is roughly 20-30% in employer-side costs alone (employer FICA, FUTA, workers' comp, unemployment, benefits costs). That's the temptation to misclassify. The reverse risk — treating a true contractor as an employee — is unusual and creates few practical issues for the worker.
Three different tests, three different answers
Three federal-level frameworks apply different tests, and states layer their own. The same worker can be:
- An independent contractor for IRS purposes
- An employee for FLSA wage-and-hour purposes (DOL)
- An employee for state ABC test purposes (in states that use ABC)
...and any of those determinations triggers liability under that body of law. There is no single "I'm a contractor" answer. The strictest applicable test usually controls operational decisions.
The IRS common-law test
The IRS uses a common-law test focusing on the right to control the worker. The agency historically grouped factors into three categories — behavioral control, financial control, and type of relationship — replacing the older 20-factor test, though many of the same factors remain relevant.
Behavioral control. Does the business have the right to direct and control how the work is done? Indicators of employee status: instructions about when, where, and how to work; training provided by the business; tools and equipment supplied; specific workflow requirements; requirement to perform the work personally.
Financial control. Does the worker have a meaningful opportunity for profit or loss based on their own business decisions? Indicators of contractor status: significant investment in own equipment, unreimbursed business expenses, services available to other clients, payment by the job rather than by the hour, opportunity for profit or loss based on managerial skill.
Type of relationship. Written contracts describing the relationship (weight is limited — courts and agencies look past the label); benefits like health insurance, vacation, retirement (indicate employee); permanency of the relationship (open-ended indicates employee, project-based indicates contractor); whether the services are a key activity of the business (key activities tend to indicate employee).
No single factor decides the case. The IRS weighs them together to determine whether the right to control exists.
Form SS-8 lets a worker or business ask the IRS to determine status. The determination is binding on the IRS but takes many months. Most businesses never file SS-8; the question typically arises during an audit or after a worker files for unemployment.
The DOL economic-reality test
The Department of Labor applies an "economic reality" test for FLSA purposes — the test that determines who's entitled to minimum wage and overtime. The factors emphasize whether the worker is economically dependent on the engaging entity or genuinely in business for themselves. Recent DOL rulemaking has revisited the multi-factor weighting; the test has been the subject of regulatory back-and-forth across administrations and ongoing litigation. Check the current DOL guidance at dol.gov before relying on a specific version.
Recurring factors across versions:
- Opportunity for profit or loss depending on managerial skill
- Investments by worker and employer
- Permanence of the working relationship
- Nature and degree of control
- Whether the work performed is integral to the employer's business
- Skill and initiative
The DOL test generally finds employment in closer cases than the IRS test does. Workers integrated into the business operations are more likely to be FLSA employees even when they have some indicia of independence.
State ABC tests
Several states have adopted "ABC" tests for state wage-and-hour, unemployment, and/or workers' comp purposes. Under an ABC test, a worker is presumed an employee unless the engaging business proves all three of:
- A: The worker is free from the engaging business's control and direction, both contractually and in fact.
- B: The worker performs work outside the usual course of the engaging business.
- C: The worker is customarily engaged in an independently established trade, occupation, or business.
Prong B is the difficult one. A plumber engaged by a homeowner satisfies Prong B. A driver engaged by a delivery company does not, because driving is the core of the business. California's Dynamex decision and AB 5 codification produced extensive litigation and statutory carve-outs for specific occupations.
States using some form of ABC test (with variations and exceptions): California, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, and others. Whether the ABC test applies to a particular law (wage-and-hour, unemployment, workers' comp) varies by state. Where it applies, many workers who pass the IRS test fail Prong B and are state-law employees.
1099 vs W-2 mechanics
Employees (W-2). Employer withholds federal and state income tax, employee's share of FICA (Social Security and Medicare), and any required state-level taxes. Employer pays employer-side FICA matching, FUTA, state unemployment, and workers' comp premium. Year-end Form W-2 issued by January 31.
Independent contractors (1099-NEC). No withholding; contractor responsible for their own income tax and self-employment tax (full 15.3% FICA equivalent). Engaging business issues Form 1099-NEC for non-employee compensation of $600 or more in a year (in most cases) by January 31. Contractor receives Form W-9 from the engaging business to provide TIN.
Payments via certain third-party networks may be reported on Form 1099-K instead of 1099-NEC; the reporting threshold has been changing — check current IRS guidance before relying on a specific amount.
Independent contractor agreement
A written independent contractor agreement strengthens the classification position but doesn't alone control it. Standard elements:
- Independent contractor designation. Express statement that the parties intend an independent contractor relationship, not employment, partnership, or joint venture.
- Scope of work. What the contractor is being engaged to do. Defining a project deliverable rather than ongoing services strengthens contractor status.
- Compensation. Project-based, milestone-based, or hourly with stated total. Lower payment-by-the-hour weight if other factors point to contractor.
- Term. Definite term or completion of project; long open-ended terms suggest employment.
- Control. Contractor controls the means and methods of performing the work, subject only to specified deliverables, schedules, and quality standards.
- Tools and expenses. Contractor provides own tools and bears own expenses unless otherwise specified.
- Other clients. Contractor permitted to perform similar services for other clients (subject to confidentiality and any non-compete).
- Subcontracting. Contractor permitted to engage subcontractors at contractor's expense (strengthens contractor status).
- No employee benefits. Acknowledgment that contractor is not entitled to employee benefits, workers' comp coverage, or unemployment from engaging business.
- Tax responsibilities. Contractor responsible for all taxes on payments received, indemnifies for any tax claims by authorities resulting from contractor's status.
- Intellectual property. Work-for-hire or assignment of IP in deliverables (default work-for-hire doesn't apply to most contractor work; the contract must specify).
- Confidentiality. Standard confidentiality provisions.
- Termination. Termination on notice or for cause.
- Standard boilerplate.
The agreement matters less than what actually happens. A contract calling the worker an independent contractor while the business directs hours, provides equipment, prohibits other work, and integrates the worker into operations will be re-classified as employment regardless of label.
The cost of misclassification
Stacked exposures when a worker is reclassified as an employee:
- IRS. Unpaid employer FICA, FUTA, withheld income tax, plus interest and penalties. Section 3509 of the Internal Revenue Code provides reduced rates if the misclassification wasn't intentional and 1099s were filed; full rates apply for willful misclassification.
- DOL. Back wages for minimum wage and overtime (typically 2 years, 3 if willful), plus liquidated damages doubling the back-wages amount, plus attorneys' fees in court actions.
- State unemployment. Back state UI contributions and penalties.
- State wage-and-hour. State minimum wage and overtime (some states more generous than FLSA), meal/rest break premium pay (California), pay-statement penalties, waiting-time penalties.
- Workers' comp. Premium back-payments and penalties for failure to cover. If a misclassified worker was injured and not covered, exposure includes the underlying claim.
- Benefits. ERISA claims for benefits the worker would have received as an employee (health, retirement) — the Vizcaino v. Microsoft line of cases is the classic precedent.
- Class action. Misclassification typically affects classes of similarly-situated workers, making class or collective action exposure significant.
- State penalty statutes. California's $5,000–$25,000 per-violation civil penalty (Labor Code 226.8); other states have similar.
For a contractor paid $80,000 a year who's reclassified as an employee, the back-payment exposure across federal and state can exceed the contractor's annual payment by a substantial margin. For larger contractor populations, exposure scales accordingly.
Statutory employees and special cases
Some workers are treated as employees by statute regardless of common-law factors:
- Drivers distributing certain goods (under specific conditions)
- Full-time life insurance sales agents
- Home workers receiving materials and specifications
- Full-time traveling or city salespersons selling for one principal
These are "statutory employees" for FICA purposes. Reverse statutory exclusions exist for licensed real estate agents and direct sellers, who are statutory non-employees by statute.
Specific occupations have their own statutory carve-outs in many states — particularly under AB 5 in California, which created occupation-specific tests for dozens of professions.
Section 530 relief
Section 530 of the Revenue Act of 1978 provides relief from federal employment tax assessments for businesses that have misclassified workers, if the business meets three conditions:
- Reasonable basis. The business had a reasonable basis for treating workers as contractors (long-standing industry practice, prior IRS audit not assessing, judicial precedent, or written professional advice).
- Substantive consistency. The business has treated similarly-situated workers consistently as contractors.
- Reporting consistency. The business has filed all required 1099s for the workers.
Section 530 relief is federal-tax-only; it doesn't affect DOL, state, or private claims.
The Voluntary Classification Settlement Program (VCSP) lets employers prospectively reclassify workers as employees and pay a reduced employment-tax liability for past misclassification. Eligibility requires having filed 1099s for the workers and not being under audit for employment-tax issues.
Practical guidance
- Apply the strictest test. If you operate in a state with an ABC test, evaluate against ABC, not the IRS test. ABC is harder to satisfy.
- Document the basis. Memo to file documenting the analysis at the start of each contractor engagement. If audited or sued, you'll need to defend the decision.
- Use contractors for projects, not roles. A contractor engaged for a defined deliverable is on safer ground than a contractor filling what's essentially an open employment slot.
- Avoid integration markers. Don't include contractors in company email distribution lists, employee meetings, benefits enrollments, or performance reviews. Don't assign company titles or business cards. Don't provide tools and equipment beyond what's truly necessary.
- Limit duration and exclusivity. Long-term, full-time, exclusive contractor relationships look like employment regardless of paperwork.
- Real contractors usually have other clients. If the contractor works only for you and has for years, the relationship is operating as employment.
- Pay through 1099-NEC and obtain W-9. Failure to issue 1099s is itself a violation and forfeits Section 530 relief.
- Consider an EOR or PEO. Where the work justifies employee treatment but the business doesn't want the operational overhead, an employer-of-record or professional employer organization can carry the legal employer relationship.
Common mistakes
- Calling someone a "1099 employee". The term is nonsense. They're a contractor or an employee, never both. The phrase signals confusion about the legal categories.
- Relying on the contractor's preference. Workers sometimes prefer contractor status for the take-home pay; that preference doesn't change the legal test. If the relationship is employment, the law treats it as employment.
- Converting employees to contractors to cut costs. The same person doing the same work the same way is the canonical misclassification fact pattern. Auditors and courts see it immediately.
- Skipping the written agreement. A written independent contractor agreement helps; absence of one hurts.
- Issuing W-2 and 1099 to the same person in the same year for similar work. Big audit flag.
- Ignoring state tests. Federal compliance doesn't satisfy state ABC requirements.
- No IP assignment. Default copyright ownership for contractor work belongs to the contractor unless the contract assigns IP to the engaging business. Many businesses discover years later that their key software was never validly assigned.
- No DTSA notice. Confidentiality clauses in contractor agreements should include the DTSA whistleblower notice (see NDAs).
FAQ
Can a contractor work full-time and still be a contractor? Possible but harder. Full-time hours, on-site presence, and exclusive relationship all push toward employment. A short-term project at full-time intensity is more defensible than ongoing full-time work.
Can I require the contractor to use my equipment? Reduces the contractor argument. Real contractors typically use their own tools.
Does paying by the hour mean it's employment? Not by itself, but it's a factor weighing toward employee. Project-based or milestone payment is stronger contractor evidence.
Does an LLC contractor automatically count as a contractor? No. The IRS and many courts look through the entity to the individual performing the work and apply the same tests. A worker putting their compensation through their LLC doesn't change the underlying classification.
What about freelancer marketplaces? The engaging business is still the principal in most cases. The marketplace is the platform, not the employer. Marketplace TOS typically explicitly disclaim employment status, but courts look at substance.
Should we just make everyone an employee to be safe? If the work is truly independent and project-based, contractor status is appropriate and the cost difference is meaningful. Defaulting all engagements to employment is fine but unnecessary.