HR & Employment
정의
The classification distinction between employees (who receive W-2 forms) and independent contractors (who receive 1099 forms), with significant legal, tax, and benefit implications for both workers and businesses.
The W-2 vs. 1099 distinction refers to the classification of workers as either employees or independent contractors — one of the most consequential decisions a business makes about its workforce. W-2 employees are on the company's payroll; the employer withholds income tax, Social Security, and Medicare taxes from each paycheck and pays the employer's share of payroll taxes (7.65%). The company issues a W-2 form at year-end summarizing wages and withholdings. Employees are also typically entitled to benefits such as health insurance, retirement plans, workers' compensation, and unemployment insurance.
Independent contractors — who receive Form 1099-NEC for payments of $600 or more — are responsible for paying their own self-employment taxes (15.3% on net self-employment income), maintaining their own insurance, and managing their own business expenses. The hiring company is not responsible for withholding taxes, providing benefits, or paying payroll taxes for contractors. This makes contractors less expensive on a direct cost basis, but the classification carries strict legal requirements.
Misclassifying employees as independent contractors is a serious legal risk. The IRS, Department of Labor, and most state labor agencies use multi-factor tests to evaluate whether a worker is truly independent: behavioral control (does the company direct how work is done?), financial control (does the worker have investment in their business, work for multiple clients, have opportunity for profit or loss?), and the nature of the relationship (is there a written contract, are there benefits, is the work integral to the business?). The California ABC test, used in California and several other states, applies an even stricter standard.
Misclassification penalties can include back payroll taxes, penalties, interest, back wages, back benefits, and class action exposure. The DOL and IRS have significantly increased enforcement efforts in recent years, and states like California have levied multi-million-dollar penalties against companies that misclassified large workforces.
Worker classification is one of the most costly mistakes a business can make, and it is also one of the easiest to get wrong accidentally. A business owner who hires workers that look and act like employees but calls them contractors to avoid payroll taxes and benefits is exposed to potentially years of back taxes and penalties if audited. The risk is not hypothetical — state labor boards and the IRS routinely audit companies in industries like delivery, construction, staffing, and tech.
An employment attorney or HR consultant can evaluate your specific working relationships against the applicable legal tests in your state, recommend proper classification, and draft contractor agreements that accurately reflect the nature of the relationship. If reclassification is needed, a professional can help manage the transition and minimize retroactive liability.