Employee or Independent Contractor

Common-Law Rules

To determine whether an individual is an employee or an independent contractor under the common law, the relationship of the worker and the business must be examined. In any employee-independent contractor determination, all information that provides evidence of the degree of control and the degree of independence must be considered. Facts that provide evidence of the degree of control and independence fall into three categories: behavioral control, financial control, and the type of relationship of the parties. Behavioral control:  whether the business has a right to direct and control how the worker does the task for which the worker is hired. Financial control:  whether the business has a right to control the business aspects of the worker's job. Type of relationship:  Facts that show the parties' type of relationship include:

The Twenty Factors:

The IRS established twenty factors to determine the degree of control by the business over an employee versus an independent contractor. No one item is weighed more than the others, but rather, all the facts and circumstances are looked at together to determine the status. The IRS has some industry examples to be used as guidelines.
  1. INSTRUCTIONS:
  2.  
  3. TRAINING:  
  4. INTEGRATION:  
  5. SERVICES RENDERED PERSONALLY:  
  6. HIRING, SUPERVISING, AND PAYING ASSISTANTS:  
  7. CONTINUING RELATIONSHIP:  
  8. SET HOURS OF WORK:  
  9. FULL TIME REQUIRED:  
  10. DOING WORK ON EMPLOYER'S PREMISES:  
  11. ORDER OR SEQUENCE SET:  
  12. ORAL OR WRITTEN REPORTS:  
  13. PAYMENT BY HOUR, WEEK, OR MONTH:
  14. PAYMENT OF BUSINESS AND/OR TRAVELING EXPENSES:  
  15. FURNISHING OF TOOLS AND MATERIALS:  
  16. SIGNIFICANT INVESTMENT:  
  17. REALIZATION OF PROFIT OR LOSS:  
  18. WORKING FOR MORE THAN ONE FIRM AT A TIME:  
  19. MAKING SERVICE AVAILABLE TO GENERAL PUBLIC:  
  20. RIGHT TO DISCHARGE:  
  21. RIGHT TO TERMINATE:

 

 

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