Before you can know how to treat payments that you make to workers for services, you must first know the business relationship that exists between you and the person performing the services. The person performing the services may be:
Under common-law rules, anyone who performs services for you is your employee if you have the right to control what will be done and how it will be done. This is so even when you give the employee freedom of action. What matters is that you have the right to control the details of how the services are performed.
Leased employees: Under certain circumstances, a corporation furnishing workers to various professional people and firms is the employer of those workers for employment tax purposes. For example, a professional service corporation may provide the services of secretaries, nurses, and other similarly trained workers to its subscribers.
The service corporation enters into contracts with the subscribers under which the subscribers specify the services to be provided and a fee is paid to the service corporation for each individual furnished. The service corporation has the right to control and direct the worker's services for the subscriber, including the right to discharge or reassign the worker. The service corporation hires the workers, controls the payment of their wages, provides them with unemployment insurance and other benefits, and is the employer for employment tax purposes.
If workers are independent contractors under the common law rules, such workers may nevertheless be treated as employees by statute (“statutory employees”) for certain employment tax purposes if they fall within any one of the following four categories and meet the three conditions described under Social security and Medicare taxes, below.
There are three categories of statutory nonemployees: direct sellers, licensed real estate agents, and certain companion sitters. Direct sellers and licensed real estate agents are treated as self-employed for all federal tax purposes, including income and employment taxes, if:
Direct sellers: Direct sellers include persons falling within any of the following three groups.
Direct selling includes activities of individuals who attempt to increase direct sales activities of their direct sellers and who earn income based on the productivity of their direct sellers. Such activities include providing motivation and encouragement; imparting skills, knowledge, or experience; and recruiting.
Licensed real estate agents: This category includes individuals engaged in appraisal activities for real estate sales if they earn income based on sales or other output.
Companion sitters: Companion sitters are individuals who furnish personal attendance, companionship, or household care services to children or to individuals who are elderly or disabled. A person engaged in the trade or business of putting the sitters in touch with individuals who wish to employ them (that is, a companion sitting placement service) will not be treated as the employer of the sitters if that person does not receive or pay the salary or wages of the sitters and is compensated by the sitters or the persons who employ them on a fee basis. Companion sitters who are not employees of a companion sitting placement service are generally treated as self-employed for all federal tax purposes.
People who follow an independent trade, business, or profession in which they offer their services to
the public, are generally not employees.However, whether such people are employees or independent contractors
depends on the facts in each case. The general rule is that an individual is an
independent contractor if you, the person for whom the services are performed,
have the right to control or direct only the result of the work and not the
means and methods of accomplishing the result.
Do not use this article as a substitute for professional advice.
The information in this article is intended to be only a general overview of the topic and may omit details that could be critical to your specific situation. Accordingly, this article should not be construed as rendering legal, tax, or other professional services. Please contact our office for more information on this topic and how it could affect your specific tax or financial situation.