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Since 1978:

Since 1978 Mother Lode Bookkeeping has been serving the North County coastal communities with the goal to provide cost-effective, professional, and highly-personalized services.

 


 

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Independent Contractor vs. Employee

 

August 29, 2008

 

For updated information see Employee vs. Independent Contractor - Ten Tips for Business Owners (8/21/2009)


Are your workers independent contractors or employees?  The answer can have a profound impact on how much tax you pay as a small business owner.  Knowing whether your workers are or are not employees will affect the amount of taxes you must withhold from their pay.  It will affect how much additional cost your business must bear, what documents and information they must provide to you, and what tax documents you must give to them. 


Employers who misclassify workers as independent contractors can end up with substantial tax bills as well as penalties for failing to pay employment taxes and failing to file required tax forms.  Workers can avoid higher tax bills and lost benefits if they know their proper status. 


Both employers and workers can ask the IRS to make a determination on whether a specific individual is an independent contractor or an employee by filing a Form SS-8, Determination of Worker Status for Purposes of Federal Employment Taxes and Income Tax Withholding, with the IRS.


Generally, whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor depends upon how much control you have as a business owner.  If you have the right to control or direct not only what is to be done but also how it is to be done then your workers are most likely employees.  If you can direct or control only the result of the work done, and not the means and methods of accomplishing the result, then your workers are probably independent contractors. 


Three broad characteristics are used by the IRS to determine the relationship between businesses and workers - Behavioral Control, Financial Control, and the Type of Relationship.  Behavioral Control covers facts that show whether the business has a right to direct or control how the work is done through instructions, training, or other means.  Financial Control covers facts that show whether the business has a right to direct or control the financial and business aspects of the worker's job.  The Type of Relationship factor relates to how the workers and the business owner perceive their relationship.


Knowing the proper worker classification can be critical to your business.  Don’t guess.  Act now to make certain you know for sure.


Links:

From the IRS web site (http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=173423,00.html)