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Difference between employees and independent contractors

Employees work in and are part of your business. Independent contractors provide services to a principal’s business.

Last updated 14 April 2024

High court decision affecting advice and guidance

The High Court judgments in CFMMEU v Personnel Contracting [2022] HCA 1 and ZG Operations v Jamsek [2022] HCA 2 clarify that the totality of the relationship between a worker and an employer consists of the legal rights and obligations arising from the contract between the parties.

To work out if your worker is an employee or independent contractor, you need to determine whether your worker is serving in your business. You do this by reviewing the legal rights and obligations in the contract you entered into with your worker.

Contracts are usually written but may also be wholly oral or a hybrid of any combination or written terms, oral terms and terms implied from conduct. Your contract may also be varied based on you or your worker’s conduct. Any label which you and the worker use in your contract to describe your relationship (such as ‘independent contractor’) will not determine or be relevant to how your relationship is characterised.

Serving in your business

The critical differences between an employee and independent contractor are:

  • an employee serves in your business, and performs their work as a representative of your business
  • an independent contractor provides services to your business and performs work to further their own business.

It is crucial that you accurately characterise the nature of the business that you carry out. You should examine the essential activities of the business that you operate and compare them with the legal rights and obligations contained in the contract you entered into with the worker.

Although the old multifactorial test is no longer used, the same indicia are still relevant in considering whether the worker is working in your business, taking into account only the legal rights and obligations (that is, the terms of the contract) agreed to between you and your worker.

Employee or independent contractor

The following table outlines each indicium and some features that may points towards or against a finding of employment. No single indicium is determinative and they should not be applied as if they are a checklist.

Common indicia

Analysis of the indicia must be done by reference only to the legal rights and obligations that arise from the contract you enter into with your worker. Conduct and work practices are not relevant, unless they are, among other things, sufficient to vary the contractual terms agreed to.

Indicia of employee or independent contractor

Employee

Independent contractor

Control: your business has the legal right to control how, where and when the worker does their work.

Control: the worker can choose how, where and when their work is done, subject to reasonable direction by you.

Integration: the worker serves in your business. They are contractually required to perform work as a representative of your business.

Integration: the worker provides services to your business. The worker performs work to further their own business.

Mode of remuneration: the worker is paid either:

  • for the time worked
  • a price per item or activity
  • a commission.

Mode of remuneration: the worker is generally contracted to achieve a specific result, and is paid when they have completed that result, often for a fixed fee.

Ability to subcontract or delegate: there is no clause in the contract allowing the worker to delegate or subcontract their work to others. The worker must perform the work themselves and can’t pay someone else to do the work for them.

Ability to subcontract or delegate: there is a clause in the contract allowing the worker the right to delegate or subcontract their work to others. The clause must not be a sham and must be legally capable of exercise.

Provision of tools and equipment:

your business provides all or most of the equipment, tools and other assets required to complete the work; or the worker provides all or most of the tools, but your business provides them with an allowance or reimburses them for expenses incurred.

Provision of tools and equipment: the worker provides all or most of the equipment, tools and other assets required to complete the work, and you do not give them an allowance or reimbursement for the expenses incurred.

The work involves the use of a substantial item that your worker is wholly responsible for.

Risk: the worker bears little or no risk. Your business bears the commercial risk for any costs arising out of injury or defect in their work.

Risk: the worker bears the commercial risk for any costs arising out of injury or defect in their work.

Generation of goodwill: your business benefits from any goodwill arising from the work of the worker.

Generation of goodwill: the worker’s business benefits from any goodwill generated from their work, not your business.

Authorised by the Australian Government, Canberra.

Superannuation for certain contractors

In certain circumstances you must pay superannuation for contractors who are deemed to be employees for superannuation purposes. These circumstances include the following:

  • if the worker works under a contract that is wholly or principally for their labour.
  • sportsperson, artist or entertainer paid to perform, present, or participate in any music, play, dance, entertainment, sport, display or promotional activity, or similar activity.
  • person paid to provide services in connection with any performance, presentation or participation in these activities.
  • person paid to perform services related to the making of a film, tape, disc, television or radio broadcast.

 

To determine if a worker is an employee or independent contractor, consider if work can be delegated to another person.

When working out if a worker is an employee or an independent contractor, you must consider the basis of payment.

Is your worker an employee or an independent contractor? You must consider who provides the tools needed for the work.

Determine if a worker is an employee or independent contractor consider who bears the risk for rectifying work defects.

To classify a worker as an employee or independent contractor, you must consider who controls the way the work is done.

To determine if a worker is an employee or independent contractor, consider their integration within your business.

Examples of the differences between employees and independent contractors in various industries.

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