Comparison
Quick answer
The distinction between an independent contractor (1099) and a W-2 employee is one of the most consequential decisions in workforce management. Misclassification exposes businesses to back taxes, penalties, and liability. The classification is determined by the nature of the working relationship — not by what you call the person — and varies by state and applicable legal tests.
Classification is determined by facts, not labels or contracts. Calling someone a 'contractor' while treating them as an employee creates significant legal and tax liability for your business. If you need someone full-time, long-term, who follows your direction and uses your equipment — they are likely an employee. Consult an employment attorney or HR consultant before bringing on workers in ambiguous situations, particularly in California, New York, or other states with strict classification laws.
Hourly rate
$150–$500/hr
Wide range reflects specialization — IP and corporate law command higher rates than general advisory
Per session
$200–$750
Typical for a 60–90 minute contract review, legal strategy, or compliance consultation
Project rate
$500–$5,000+
Flat-fee engagements for entity formation, contract drafting, or trademark filings