Employment status

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1. Overview

In employment law a person’s employment status helps determine:

  • their rights
  • their employer’s responsibilities

A person may have a different employment status in tax law.

The main types of employment status are:

Contact Acas (or the Labour Relations Agency in Northern Ireland) for advice about employment status, employee rights or employer responsibilities.

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Courts and tribunals can make final decisions on employment status.

2. Worker

A person is generally classed as a ‘worker’ if:

  • they have a contract or other arrangement to do work or services personally for a reward (a contract can be written or unwritten)
  • their reward is for money or a benefit in kind, for example the promise of a contract or future work
  • they only have a limited right to send someone else to do the work (subcontract)
  • their employer has to have work for them to do as long as the contract or arrangement lasts
  • they are not doing the work as part of their own limited company in an arrangement where the ‘employer’ is actually a customer or client

Employment rights

Workers are entitled to certain employment rights, including:

They may also be entitled to:

Agency workers have specific rights from the first day at work.

Workers usually are not entitled to:

Casual or irregular work

Someone is likely to be a worker if most of these apply:

  • they occasionally do work for a specific business
  • the business does not have to offer them work and they do not have to accept it - they only work when they want to
  • their contract with the business uses terms like ‘casual’, ‘freelance’, ‘zero hours’, ‘as required’ or something similar
  • they had to agree with the business’s terms and conditions to get work - either verbally or in writing
  • they are under the supervision or control of a manager or director
  • they cannot send someone else to do their work
  • the business deducts tax and National Insurance contributions from their wages
  • the business provides materials, tools or equipment they need to do the work

3. Employee

An employee is someone who works under an employment contract.

A person may be an employee in employment law but have a different status for tax purposes. Employers must work out each worker’s status in both employment law and tax law.

Employment rights

All employees are workers, but an employee has extra employment rights and responsibilities that do not apply to workers who are not employees.

These rights include all of the rights workers have and:

Some of these rights require a minimum length of continuous employment before an employee qualifies for them. An employment contract may state how long this qualification period is.

Working out employment status for an employee

Someone who works for a business is probably an employee if most of the following are true:

  • they’re required to work regularly unless they’re on leave, for example they’re on holiday or on sick leave or on maternity leave
  • they’re required to do a minimum number of hours and expect to be paid for time worked
  • a manager or supervisor is responsible for their workload, saying when a piece of work should be finished and how it should be done
  • they cannot send someone else to do their work
  • they get paid holiday
  • they’re entitled to contractual or Statutory Sick Pay and to maternity pay or to paternity pay
  • they can join the business’s pension scheme
  • the business’s disciplinary and grievance procedures apply to them
  • they work at the business’s premises or at an address specified by the business
  • their contract sets out redundancy procedures
  • the business provides the materials, tools and equipment for their work
  • they only work for the business or if they do have another job, it’s completely different from their work for the business
  • their contract, statement of terms and conditions or offer letter (which can be described as an ‘employment contract’) uses terms like ‘employer’ and ‘employee’

If most of these do not apply, you should work out if the person is self-employed.

Individuals and their employers may have to pay unpaid tax and penalties, or lose entitlement to benefits, if their employment status is wrong.

4. Employee shareholders

An employee shareholder is someone who works under an employment contract and owns at least £2,000 worth of shares in the employer’s company or parent company.

Employment rights

Employee shareholders have most of the same employment rights as people who are workers and as people who are employees.

They also have the right to collective redundancy consultation and transfer of undertakings (TUPE) - this protects the employee’s terms and conditions when the business is transferred to a new owner.

Employee shareholders do not have these rights:

  • protection against unfair dismissal - apart from dismissal on grounds of discrimination and in relation to health and safety
  • statutory redundancy pay
  • the right to request flexible working - except in the 2 weeks after returning from parental leave
  • certain statutory rights to request time off for training

Employee shareholders must give 16 weeks’ notice if they want to come back early from:

Employers can choose more generous employment rights than the statutory ones.

Tax relief and obligations

Employee shareholders can get tax relief on the first £2,000 of shares they get before 1 December 2016.

Employee shareholders must pay tax on buying and selling shares.

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has further guidance on tax relief for employee shareholders.

Applying for employment shareholder jobs

Anyone can apply for an employee shareholder job.

People claiming Jobseeker’s Allowance do not have to apply for an employee shareholder job that Jobcentre Plus have told them about.

Existing employees do not have to accept a change to an employment contract to become an employee shareholder if they do not want to.

Offering employment shareholder status

Employers must following certain rules when offering employment shareholder status to their employees.

5. Self-employed and contractor

A person is self-employed if they run their business for themselves and take responsibility for its success or failure.

Self-employed workers are not paid through PAYE, and they do not have the rights and responsibilities of an employee.

A worker must tell HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) if they think they have become self-employed.

Someone can be both employed and self-employed at the same time, for example if they work for an employer during the day and run their own business in the evenings.

Employment rights

Employment law does not cover self-employed people in most cases because they are their own boss.

If a person is self-employed, they have:

  • protection of their health and safety
  • protection of their rights against discrimination (in some cases)
  • the rights and responsibilities set out by the terms of the contract they have with their client

Working out if someone is self-employed

HMRC may regard someone as self-employed for tax purposes even if they have a different status in employment law.

Employers should check if a worker is self-employed in:

  • tax law - in case the worker is exempt from the employer’s PAYE scheme
  • employment law - in case the worker has employee or worker rights

Individuals and their employers may have to pay unpaid tax and penalties, or lose entitlement to benefits, if their employment status is wrong.

Checking if they’re self-employed for tax purposes

You can check someone’s employment status online to see if a worker should be classed as employed or self-employed.

If you cannot check online, contact HMRC.

There are special rules for businesses supplying workers, for example an employment agency.

Checking their employment rights

If someone is self-employed, they do not have the rights and responsibilities of an employee or the rights and responsibilities of a worker.

Someone is probably self-employed if they’re self-employed for tax purposes and most of the following are true:

  • they put in bids or give quotes to get work
  • they’re not under direct supervision when working
  • they submit invoices for the work they’ve done
  • they’re responsible for paying their own National Insurance and tax
  • they do not get holiday or sick pay when they’re not working
  • they operate under a contract (sometimes known as a ‘contract for services’ or ‘consultancy agreement’) that uses terms like ‘self-employed’, ‘consultant’ or an ‘independent contractor’

Contractors

A contractor can:

There’s a special scheme for self-employed contractors and sub-contractors working in the construction industry called the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS).

Contractor rules changed on 6 April 2021. Your employment status and the way you pay tax may have changed. Check the off-payroll working rules for IR35.

6. Director

Company directors run limited companies on behalf of shareholders.

Directors have different rights and responsibilities from employees, and are classed as office holders for tax and National Insurance contribution purposes.

If a person does other work that’s not related to being a director, they may have an employment contract and get employment rights.

7. Office holder

A person who’s been appointed to a position by a company or organisation but does not have a contract or receive regular payment may be an office holder. This includes:

  • statutory appointments, such as registered company directors or secretaries, board members of statutory bodies, or crown appointments
  • appointments under the internal constitution of an organisation, such as club treasurers or trade union secretaries
  • appointments under a trust deed, such as trustees
  • ecclesiastical appointment, such as members of the clergy

Office holders are neither employees nor workers. However, it’s possible for someone to be an office holder and an employee if they have an employment contract with the same company or organisation that meets the criteria for employees.

Working out employment status for an office holder

Someone is likely to be an office holder if most of these statements apply to them:

  • there is no contract or service agreement relating to their appointment
  • their duties are minimal, and are only those required under the relevant statute, constitution or trust deed
  • they do not get a salary or any other form of regular payment for their services
  • the only payment they get is a voluntary payment (honorarium), regardless of the work they do - tax and National Insurance are deducted by the appointing body
  • they’re effectively working as an independent office, and are not under the close supervision or control of the appointing body

8. Legal decisions on employment status

A court or employment tribunal (known as an industrial tribunal in Northern Ireland) can make a final decision on employment status for employment rights purposes. They’ll look at how the employment relationship between the person and the business works in practice.

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) may separately argue that someone is self-employed for tax purposes. This may be confirmed by the tax tribunal and the courts.

An employment tribunal or court may still make a decision that someone is a worker or employee for employment rights purposes.