Beware the risks of managing independent contractors as you would employees
by Kimberly Perkins, Green Apple Resources, LLC, NH
Your business is starting to grow. You have no employees, or perhaps a few, but you can no longer handle the workload yourself. You find yourself stuck in a difficult situation and there is insufficient budget to add employees to your team. One immediate option in addressing the work crunch can involve hiring independent contractors. Before taking this step, it is important to understand the tax rules and implications related to this option.
The costs of hiring regular employees can be considerable, including Worker’s Compensation insurance, Social Security, and Medicare taxes to pay. Additional costs that may be required to attract good help might include health insurance, vacation time, and other benefits. There is also the added overhead to manage payroll, tax withholding, tax deposits, and quarterly tax filings, which is often outsourced to a payroll company or bookkeeper, but still time consuming.
When faced with these hurdles small business owners often decide to hire independent contractors. But you must acknowledge the difference between an employee and a contractor, as workers’ rights are protected and enforced by Federal laws.
Regardless of whether you consider a person who works for you to be an employee or an independent contractor it really does not matter. What’s more important is how the Federal Government perceives that person’s status. And that perception determines your tax-filing liability vis-à-vis withholding, social security and Medicare, and unemployment taxes. Knowing a worker’s status up front will save you headaches down the road.
In general, someone who performs services for you is your employee if you control 1) what work is to be done and 2) how such work will be done.
If you wish to hire independent contractors as opposed to employees, the following tips help to ensure that the IRS agrees with you on the status of these workers.
Try to always execute a contract between your company and an independent contractor. This can be a formal contract (many can be found on the web or in business books), or a more informal letter of agreement. Either way, both parties should sign the agreement, and keep an original signed copy in your files. This can be used on your behalf to illustrate the validity of an independent contractor relationship, should the IRS come knocking.
If you do not hold firm on how you manage your contractors and their employment status, you can open the door to difficulties later on. The IRS, as an agency, holds little sympathy and empathy for business owners who hire workers that should correctly be considered employees but are paid as independent contractors. And it has a whole arsenal of civil and criminal penalties it can impose upon employers, whether the misclassification is merely a misunderstanding of the law (negligent) or willful. Some, but not all, of these penalties are listed below.
Failure to withhold income taxes. The employer is subject to the penalty of 1.5 percent of wages paid, plus interest compounded daily.
Failure to withhold FICA (Social Security) taxes. The employer is subject to the penalty of 20 percent of the FICA tax on the employee, plus interest compounded daily.
Failure to report workers' wages or other payments on Forms W-2 or 1099-MISC. The employer is subject to the penalty of 3 percent of wages paid and 40 percent of the FICA tax.
Failure to file tax return relating to employment taxes. The employer is subject to the penalty of paying the employer share of Social Security and unemployment taxes, as well as a penalty equal to 5 percent of the tax for each month of the failure to pay, up to a maximum of 25 percent of the tax.
Failure to pay employment taxes. The employer is subject to the penalty of 0.5 percent of the tax, for each month of the failure to pay, up to a maximum of 25 percent of the tax.
The employer who, either negligently or willfully, understates its liability for Social Security and unemployment taxes is subject to the penalty of 20 percent of the understatement.
The employer who fraudulently understates its liability for Social Security and unemployment taxes is subject to the penalty of 75 percent of the understatement.
Willful failure to collect and remit withholding taxes and the employee portion of FICA taxes. Each such failure is a felony that, on conviction, results in a fine up to $10,000 or imprisonment up to five years, or both.
In addition to these Federal penalties, State and Local authorities may impose penalties of their own.
Thus, while it might be cost effective to hire workers as independent contractors, be sure to treat them as such, or it could end up costing you even more than having hired them as regular employees in the first place.
Green Apple Resources, LLC
Copyright © 2008 — All rights reserved
atthecore@greenappleresources.com
(603) 381-1987


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