Employee vs
Independent Contractor
The IRS uses the 20 Common Law factors as a
guideline when determining if sufficient control is present
to establish an employer-employee relationship. This guide
lists each factor and provides elements characteristic of
both employee and independent contractor. The degree of
importance of each factor varies depending on the
occupation and the scope of work being performed.
Under the common-law test, an employer-employee
relationship is present when the person for whom services
are performed has the right to control and direct the
individual who performs the services as to both:
A. The result to be accomplished by the work, and
B. The details and methods used in achieving the end result
It is not necessary that the hiring firm overtly direct or
control the means and methods by which a result is to be
accomplished - all that is required is that they have the
right to do so.
1. Instructions
A worker who must comply with another persons' instructions
about when, where and how he or she is to work is
ordinarily an employee. If the service recipient has the
right to require compliance with instructions, or require
completion of a different scope of work using specified
guidelines, it is likely that an employer-employee
relationship exists.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Must follow set and/or mandatory instructions, where, when,
how to perform work. Follows own individual instructions.
Performs work based upon independently established
procedures or industry specs.
2. Training
Training a worker to complete the task at hand or requiring
a worker to attend meetings and receive direction are
factors indicative of an employer-employee relationship.
Training a worker in specific methods indicates that the
service recipient wants the services accomplished in a
certain manner. Voluntary uncompensated training may not be
an indication of an employer-employee relationship.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Receives and/or is required to receive training. Skilled
professional requiring no training to adequately perform
services.
3. Integration of Services
When the success of a particular project is dependent upon
the performance of certain services, especially for a
lengthy period in ongoing manner, the worker who performs
those services must necessarily be subject to a certain
amount of control by the service recipient. Integration of
the worker's services into the business operations
generally shows that the worker is subject to direction and
control.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Provides essential services which meld into overall
business operation. Work performed is not an "integral
part," it is a "unique" service.
4. Services Rendered Personally
By requiring a worker to perform the contracted services
personally, presumably the service recipient is interested
in the means and methods used to accomplish the work in
addition to the results.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Required to render services personally. Has assistants or
employees while retaining the right to hire others to
perform the required work.
5. Hiring, Supervising, and Paying
Assistants
If the service recipient supervises the hiring process and
paying of assistants, that factor generally shows control
over the workers on the job. However, if the worker
performs the hiring, supervision and pays assistants and is
responsible only for the attainment of a result, this
factor is indicative of an independent contractor.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Does not supervise or hire others. Hires assistants at his
or her expense to perform all or part of project.
6. Regular and Continuous Relationship
A continuing relationship not based on projects between the
worker and the person or persons for whom the services are
performed indicates that an employer-employee relationship
exists.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Services are part of a continuing relationship. Provides
services and contracts for separate and distinct projects,
not on continuing basis.
7. Set Hours of Work
Requiring the work to be performed at set hours indicates
control by the service recipient over the worker and is
indicative of an employer - employee relationship.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Required to work set hours. Retains right to complete work
at any time.
8. Full Time Required
If the worker must devote substantially full time to the
business and is not working on a project basis, the worker
may be limited from performing services elsewhere and to
some extent is being controlled. An independent contractor
is free to perform work for other clients as he or she
chooses.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Required to devote full-time to a job on a Non-project
basis. Contract specifies what is to be accomplished by
what date.
9. Doing Work on Employer's Premises
If the service recipient requires the worker to perform the
work on-site and the work could be done elsewhere, this
factor suggests control.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Required to work on-site, when alternatives exist.
Rents/leases location where work is performed.
10. Order or Sequence Set
If a worker must perform services in the order or sequence
set by the service recipient, this factor shows that the
worker is not free to follow the worker's own pattern of
work. The worker should maintain this right. Adherence to
an established industry or technical standard is generally
not regarded as control on the part of the service
recipient.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Required to perform task in set manner, routine, schedule.
Has full discretion over routine or manner in which to
perform services.
11. Oral or Written Reports
Requiring the worker to submit regular oral or written
reports indicates a degree of control. Quality assurance
checks with no evaluation system may not indicate an
employer-employee relationship.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Required to submit regular oral and/or written work reports
where work is evaluated. Has few or no obligations to file
regular written or oral reports.
12. Payment by Hour, Week, Month
Payment by the hour, week, or month generally points to an
employer-employee relationship. Contracts structured with
payment made by the job or on a fixed fee basis indicates
that the worker is an independent contractor.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
A person is paid at regular intervals. Compensation
determined separately by project or based on fixed fee.
13. Payment of Business and/or Traveling
Expenses
Ordinarily employees are reimbursed for travel or business
related expenses. An employer, to be able to control
expenses, generally retains the right to regulate the
worker's business activities. An independent contractor
incurs and pays travel and incidental costs as part of
his/her ongoing business expenses.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Expenses are paid or reimbursed. No reimbursement for
out-of-pocket expenses.
14. Furnish Tools or Equipment
The furnishing of significant tools, materials, and other
equipment, tends to reduce the workers risk of loss and
lean towards the existence of an employer-employee
relationship.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Tools and materials are furnished. Furnishes own tools and
materials.
15. Significant Investment
If the worker invests in facilities that are used in
performing services that factor tends to indicate that the
worker is an independent contractor. Particularly if part
of this investment requires ongoing overhead or maintenance
costs. Lack of investment in facilities indicates
dependence on the service recipient for such facilities,
and accordingly, the existence of an employer-employee
relationship.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Does not invest in facilities and/or equipment used to
perform work. Possesses and invests in facilities and
equipment to perform services.
16. Realization of Profit or Loss
A worker who can realize a profit or suffer a loss as a
result of performing the contracted services is generally
an independent contractor. Independent contractors are
considered businesses. A business inherently incurs certain
financial risks and can realize profits while employees do
not.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Compensated for services at fixed rate regardless of
profitability. Shoulders the possibility of incurring a
loss and realizing a profit.
17. Major Source of Income (Working for more than
one firm at a time)
Training a worker to complete the task at hand or requiring
a worker to attend meetings and receive direction are
factors indicative of an employer-employee relationship.
Training a worker in specific methods indicates that the
service recipient wants the services accomplished in a
certain manner. Voluntary uncompensated training may not be
an indication of an employer-employee relationship.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Performs services for only one firm at a time, on a non
project basis. Has numerous concurrent clients is not
financially dependent on any one.
18. Making Service Available to General
Public
The fact that a worker makes his or her services available
to the general public lends itself to independent
contractor status.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Services are not offered to general public, points toward
control. Offers services to public.
19. Right to Discharge
An employer exercises control through the threat of
dismissal, which to some degree can cause the worker to
comply with the employer's instructions. An independent
contractor, on the other hand, cannot be fired so long as
he or she produces a result that meets the contract
specifications.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
Can be discharged at any time with no liquidated damages.
Cannot be discharged other than for failure to perform
contracted service.
20. Right to Terminate
If the worker has the right to end his or her relationship
with the service recipient at will and not incur a
liability, that factor indicates an employer-employee
relationship.
EMPLOYEE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR
May terminate relationship at any time. May terminate his
or her relationship, only upon completion of contract or
breach by other party.