Employment status is an important but often confusing issue as the distinction between different types of employment status is not always clear.
We outline below the three main types of employment status and highlight the key differences between them.
It is essential that you clearly and accurately establish the employment status of individuals that your business engages.
The three main types of employment status are:
Failure to recognise an individual’s actual employment status and disregard of their associated employment rights opens your business up to a risk of claims.
For example, a worker or employee who has not been paid their statutory holiday entitlement could bring a claim for you to pay this.
When you engage an individual, you should use appropriate documentation which makes it clear what their employment status is:
Employees provide work personally under a contract of employment.
The contract does not need to be written, and it can contain implied terms so long as the key terms (known as the ‘particulars of employment’) are written, e.g. pay, hours of work, annual leave etc.
Employees are paid through PAYE, so the employer deducts tax and national insurance contributions from their salary.
Employees are afforded the most protection in employment law, as they have important rights that workers lack.
The employment rights of employees include:
A worker also provides work personally under a contract, but the terms are slightly different from an employee.
There is no mutual obligation between a worker and an employer.
This means that the employer is not under any obligation to provide work to the worker, and the worker is not under any obligation to carry out work offered by the employer.
Workers are paid through PAYE, so the employer deducts tax and national insurance contributions on their behalf.
The employment rights of workers are more limited than those of employees and include:
A self-employed person runs their own business and offers services to a company.
They have freedom to provide the services however they want: there are no fixed hours, they can use substitutes or engage other workers to do the work and they use their own tools and equipment.
They are paid a fee for the work they do rather than a salary, and they are not paid through PAYE, so they are responsible for dealing with tax and national insurance themselves.
Self-employed people do not have any employment rights.
However, they have protection for their health and safety, and in some circumstances, they are protected against discrimination.
As explained above, the type of contract an individual is engaged under and the terms it contains provide an indication of their employment status.
For example, an individual engaged under a contract that requires them to work a set number of hours for the employer in return for a salary and prohibits them from working elsewhere without the employer’s express permission will most likely be an employee.
This is because these terms are commonly used in employment contracts and they do not apply to workers or self-employed individuals.
It is important to note that the relevant contract or documentation alone cannot be used to determine an individual’s employment status.
When deciding employment status, courts and tribunals also look at how the individual actually works in practice and more weight is attributed to the practical reality than the contractual terms.
For example, if the contract describes the individual as self-employed but in reality they are not allowed to use a substitute, the employer exerts a great deal of control over their work and they are treated the same as other employees (e.g. they are subject to the disciplinary procedure) then the contract will be considered a ‘sham’ and the individual will be an employee.
The tests for establishing an individual’s employment status are rather ambiguous and the tests used by different bodies (e.g. employment tribunals and HMRC) are not always coherent.
However, each employment status has some key elements that must be satisfied.
There are four main elements to the employee test:
There are three parts to the worker test:
An individual will be self-employed if they are genuinely operating their own business.
Factors which indicate that an individual is self-employed include: