Employee or Independent Contractor?

If you “do work” for a company, are you an employee or an independent contractor?  And why does it matter?

For tax purposes, it matters a lot.  Generally, being an independent contractor is much preferable from a tax point of view.  If your relationship is that of an independent contractor (i.e., you are carrying on business), then:

On the other hand, if you are en employee, then:

Being an employee or an independent contractor does not just depend on what you and the company call your relationship.  If you want to be an independent contractor, you have to establish that you are in fact independent and not an employee.

Not surprisingly, the Canada Revenue Agency will often take the position that you are really an employee.  This is especially likely if there is only a single company paying you income (i.e., you only have one “client).  However, you may be still able to show that you are not an employee.

There is no clear or definitive test to apply.  The Courts have come up with a number of guidelines, but each case depends on its facts.

The following criteria are important:

For example, you should decline most of the traditional employment benefits, and simply opt to issue regular invoices to the company to pay for your services, plus disbursements such as travel or long-distance phone charges that you incur.  Of course, you will want to discuss with the company how your compensation is calculated; normally, as an independent contractor, you would charge a significantly higher hourly rate than as an employee, to make up for the lack of benefits and the lack of severance protection if your contract expires and is not renewed.

You should have a contract signed by both parties that states that you are an independent contractor and not an employee.  As well, you should avoid having a business card with the company’s name on it, and appearing on the company’s internal telephone list.  That makes you look more an integrated part of the company, and less like an outside consultant or contractor.

Finally, if you are an independent contractor and your total billings exceed $30,000 per year, do not forget to register for and invoice the GST as 5% on top of your billings.  (If you are in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick or Newfoundland, this is normally 13% Harmonized Sales Tax instead of 5% GST; in Quebec it is GST plus 7.5% Quebec Sales Tax on the GST included amount.)  The company generally will not care about this; most businesses recover all the GST they pay out by claiming input tax credits, so the GST you add to your invoices will not cost the company anything unless it is in the business of making “exempt” supplies (such as financial services or certain health care services).

Recently, Canada Revenue Agency has increased its review of employees’ T4 slips and Sub Contractor Reporting Forms to identify situations where a company has treated a person as an independent contractor, and has reassessed various businesses treating the person as an employee, with very severe source deduction penalties, as well as significant Canada Pension Plan, Employment Insurance and accumulating non deductible interest costs.

We would be pleased to discuss and review your situation and minimize the impact that a Canada Revenue Agency audit could have on your business, so call us today at 905-528-0234!.