Hiring Others
Are you an Employer?

Determining if you are an employer can be complicated. Many small companies hire family members and hope that they can avoid paying payroll taxes. Unfortunately, this doesn't work. Family members must pay most employer taxes. Other companies try to avoid payroll taxes by hiring independent contractors. Because this is a popular tax loophole, the IRS is now carefully investigating whether independent contractors meet the required criteria. If they don't, the employer can be held liable for all the employee's taxes.

Before we begin, are YOU an employee?

  • Sole Proprietors: Since you own a sole proprietorship, you are not an employee. You are the owner. Any money you take from the company is a draw on your company's after-tax profit. It is not salary. Do not pay regular employee-employer taxes on yourself. Instead, you must pay social security self-employment tax on the first $118,500 in profits and Medicare taxes on all your profits. These are explained with Schedule SE Self-Employment Tax.
  • Partnerships: Partners are not employees; they are owners. Any money taken from the company is a draw on their share of the company's after-tax profit. It is not salary. Do not pay regular employee-employer taxes on partners. Instead, partners must pay social security self-employment tax on the first $118,500 and Medicare taxes on all the profits that they receive. These are explained with Schedule SE Self-Employment Tax
  • LLCs LLC members are owners, not employees. Any money they take from the LLC is a draw on their "capital account", it is not salary. Do not pay regular employee-employer taxes on payments made to members.
  • Members are responsible for paying their own taxes on their portion of the LLC's net income, regardless of whether they received the net income in cash. Each member must pay social security self-employment tax and income tax (see Schedule SE and 1040ES).
  • Non-member managers are automatically employees.
  • Corporations: If your corporation has anyone actively involved in its operation, it is an employer.

Are your other workers employees?

IRS rules determine this, not an agreement between you and the worker. The IRS presumes that, except for statutory non-employees described below, all workers are employees unless the hiring firm can legally prove otherwise.

Corporations: Are shareholders, officers or directors employees?

If you work for a corporation and receive compensation for your work, you are an employee - even if you are the only shareholder. You should pay regular employment taxes on these wages.

Corporate directors are generally paid as independent contractors. However, this only applies to payments for services they render as a corporate director. Any income that they receive for general services must be taxed as a regular employee.

Corporate officers' income must be taxed as regular employees.

Corporations: Can you pay dividends instead of salary?

Some sole shareholders try to avoid employment taxes by paying themselves a very small salary and "distributing" the remainder of the corporation's profits as dividends. Before you do this, remember that you may be audited and will have to show that:

  • Your wages were typical for your job and industry;
  • Your dividend income was not a result of your direct labor.

There is an exception: Income from royalties are not considered wages for employment tax purposes, but are earnings based on the corporation's assets.

The IRS has two classifications

The IRS has two classifications for workers: non-employees and employees.

Non-employees

Non-employees include independent contractors and statutory non-employees.

Independent contractors must:

  • Offer their services to the general public
  • Supply their own tools and a place to work AND
  • Control the methods used to accomplish the work; hiring firms should only be concerned with the end result.

Statutory non-employee Specific laws designate that the following workers are automatically non-employees:

  • Direct sellers who sell products door-to-door to the final user
  • Licensed real estate agents.

If you use non-employees in your business, you do not have to withhold or pay any employer taxes. Send your non-employees annual 1099Misc forms.

Employees

Any non-owner who was not described under non-employees above is an employee. There are two categories of employees: statutory employees (where a specific law automatically makes them an employee) and common law employees.

Statutory employees

  • Food (except milk) and laundry drivers;
  • Full-time traveling salespeople who sell goods to people who will re-sell the item;
  • Full-time life insurance agents working mainly for one firm
  • At-home workers who are supplied with the materials or goods and are given specifications of the work to be done.

Common law employees

  • Everyone else not described in non-employees or statutory employees above (including family members)

If you have employees: you will have to file employer forms and withhold and pay employee-employer taxes.

Warning if you want to use independent contractors

If you plan to hire independent contractors instead of employees, it is NOT enough to rely on the three characteristics listed above. There are additional rules and specific do's and don'ts that you must follow or you will be vulnerable to substantial government fines.

The IRS and other agencies conduct routine audits and fine companies that ignore these rules. Many (if not most) companies lose the audits. The fines and back taxes can easily be $25,000 for one misclassified worker.

Independent contractors...the bottom line

In a true independent contractor relationship, the hiring firm has no right to control the worker or the work. The hiring firm can only control (specify) the results of the work - not how the work is accomplished. If you hire independent contractors, you must be willing to give up control over their actions. That means:

  • No set work hours
  • No rules
  • No supervision
  • No reports
  • No supervising their assistants
  • No ability to fire at will
  • No changing their work or schedule without their permission
  • No deadlines, unless agreed upon in a contract
  • No training
  • No ongoing instructions
  • Treating your independent contractors as if they each own a business with 20 employees.

Myths that cause firms to lose audits

Independent contractor status is NOT determined by whether the worker:

  • Asked to be treated as an independent contractor
  • Has a written contract
  • Works for you sporadically, inconsistently or on call
  • Is paid commission only
  • Works without supervision
  • Works for more than one company.

The only test to a true independent contractor relationship is whether the hiring firm had the right to control the worker or the process of his work.

The IRS looks at three things: Behavioral Control, Financial Control, and Relationships of the Parties. It is looking for the RIGHT of the hiring firm to control. Click here for an IRS pamphlet called Independent Contractor or Employee.

Contract for Services

We have included a standard contract for services to use for independent contractors. You do not have to have a contract to satisfy IRS rules, however, it helps both you and the contractor stay within the normal bounds of an independent contractor relationship. Please note, that signing the contract without following it, will not help. Click here for the contract for service agreement.

IRS forms

There are two optional forms you can use for an official ruling on whether a worker is an independent contractor.

SS-8 Determination of Workers Status is used for an official IRS ruling on whether a worker is an employee or a contractor. Please note that even if you get a positive ruling, if later, you treat the worker as an employee, the ruling will be invalid.

W-9 Request for Taxpayer ID Number is used by some businesses for the contractor to certify that they are providing you their correct taxpayer ID number. Since this form is never sent to the IRS and does not help you in an audit, it is of questionable help.

Questions? You can also call the IRS information hotline (800) 829-4933. For forms, call (800) 829-3676 or obtain them online at http://apps.irs.gov/app/picklist/list/formsPublications.html.

Paying Your Employees(and Uncle Sam)

Your first obligation is to pay your employees, and with them, Uncle Sam. You can use this tool to calculate payroll taxes and net pay.

Calculating Payroll Taxes

Remember, that when you pay the withheld taxes to the government, employers must MATCH social security and Medicare. The calculators above do not calculate tax on tips. If your employees are paid tips, please review:

Employee Tip Income

Use the following forms to pay taxes to the government (usually a monthly requirement for new businesses):

EFTPS Deposit for Federal Payroll Taxes

Payment Vouchers for State Payroll Taxes

Paying Yourself (and Uncle Sam)

Please go to Government Requirements and under Taxes and Required Forms, select "Paying Yourself " and your business entity.

Paying Independent Contractors

Pay independent contractors using the same systems as you do for other vendors. Do not ask for time-sheets or pay them with your regular employees.

Government Requirements

Contract for Services

A contract is not required to hire an independent contractor. However, it is useful to clearly establish responsibilities so that both parties realize that the person being hired is not an employee and has different rights than employees have.

Where to get a contract for services agreement?

You can obtain a contract for services online, in an independent contractor how-to book, from your attorney, or from the library. You can also create your own custom agreement by visiting your county law library and requesting the legal forms book for your state.

You can also use the sample contractor agreement available through the SME Toolkit (a service of The World Bank)

What the contract typically says

The contract establishes the worker as an independent contractor, who has the right to hire assistants, choose how to do the work, and cannot be terminated at will. It should state that the contractor is responsible for taxes and that the hiring firm will not provide workers compensation insurance or other benefits associated with employees. It outlines how long the hiring firm will have to pay invoices after receipt.

The contract should also describe the services to be performed and the compensation (preferably the total amount, not an hourly rate).

Doesn't guarantee independent contractor status

A signed contract does not guarantee that the IRS or other agency will determine that the worker is an independent contractor. Here are some reasons why sometimes courts have ignored signed contracts:

  • Actions are important: You must treat the worker like a business owner, not an employee.
  • Even if you don't act on it, your right to control shows you are an employer. To be an independent contractor relationship, you (hiring firm) cannot have the right to control when, where, how, and by whom the work is done.
  • The work should involve some amount of entrepreneurial skill or risk.
  • The contract should be negotiated between peers, not forced upon the worker.

What to do

  1. Determine the final results that you want, and any key performance milestones in the project.
  2. Negotiate with the contractor the total pay for the job and the percentage to be paid at each performance milestone.
  3. Wherever possible, have the contractor obtain his/her own resources and tools to accomplish the job.
  4. Determine if there is any potential liability that would cause you to require the contractor to provide insurance
  5. Establish the requirement that the contractor submit invoices to you before being paid.
  6. Do not change the contract (or job) without mutually negotiating any change.

What should NOT be in the contract

Do not put restrictions that indicate an employer-employee relationship. Specifically, do not give the hiring firm the right to "terminate at will", control who does the work, the working hours, etc.

Questions? Contact a business attorney.

Overview of Employer Requirements

Before we begin the forms, here is basic information about employer requirements. The state and federal governments impose 6 employee-related taxes and require workers compensation insurance from either private insurers or a state affiliated agency. Some of the taxes are paid for by employees. Others are paid by employers. Some are shared.

Employees pay through withholdings

Tax Tax Rate Maximum
Federal income tax (FIT) 10-35% --
1/2 social security (FICA) 6.2% $6,621.60
1/2 Medicare 1.45% --
State income tax 2.59%-8% ---

Employers pay

Tax Tax Rate Maximum
Workers compensation insurance varies --
1/2 social security (FICA) 6.2% $6,621.60
1/2 Medicare 1.45% --
Federal unemployment (FUTA) 0.8% $56.00
AZ Unemployment (UI) 2.1% $147.00

Prepaid workers compensation

State law requires that employers either prepay their workers compensation premium or provide the insurance carrier a deposit. The amount of this prepayment varies by the type of business, but can range from $100 to $1000+ depending on the type of business you are in.

Tax deadlines

Employers are responsible for withholding the proper amount of employee-paid taxes and depositing them and the employer-paid taxes in a timely manner. This kit shows you when each tax is due, how to pay it, and the reporting requirements. The taxing agencies have substantial penalties for late deposits or late report filing. These penalties are not described. Suffice it to say that they do not waive penalties due to ignorance and are very serious about their deadlines. They do not want employers to mis-use taxes meant to benefit employees.

Personally liable for taxes

Business owners are personally liable for employment taxes. This means that if you declare bankruptcy or close down a business, you will still be personally liable for employment taxes owed - even if you formed a corporation or limited liability company.

Required employee records

Unemployment records must be retained in Arizona for a minimum period of four years. This information generally includes: name; social security number; dates of hire, rehire and termination; wages by period; Payroll pay periods and pay dates; date and circumstances of termination.

Employees who are discharged, fired, laid off or have a leave of absence must be given their final pay within 3 working days. Employees who voluntarily quit must be given their final pay by the next regular payday.

Identity theft... how to destroy documents

The federal government requires employers to restrict access to personal information that might lead to identity theft. Specifically, any information that can be reported by a consumer reporting agency, such as social security numbers, addresses, and telephone numbers, must be kept confidential. That means that the files (either paper or electronic) should not be available for other employees to see.

This information must be destroyed before discarding it. If it is on a computer, it must be deleted before discarding or donating the computer. If it is on paper, it must be shredded before discarding. Failure to do this may subject you to fines or liability for identity theft.

Other requirements

In addition to payroll taxes, employers have many other responsibilities. While all are required, their priorities will depend on the business you are in. For example, if you are starting a construction business, the safety requirements are critical, and should be done before hiring employees. They are less critical to a consulting business. Because of that, we have put most of these requirements in the "Filling in the Gaps" section of this kit. Please review them and if any are critical to your business, do them before hiring employees.

Part-time, on-call, exempt, hourly

Employee classifications are often used to to distinguish which employees receive certain benefits. For example, a company may develop a policy that only full-time workers and part-time workers over 30 hours receive vacation benefits. Companies have this flexibility in most areas, except:

  • Overtime must be paid to any employee who does not meet the "exempt" definition by the U.S. Department of Labor . So simply calling your employees "exempt" doesn't work.
  • Employee status does not mean permanent or regular work. Anyone who works under your direction for even 20 minutes, is an employee. So on-call workers are not contract help; they are employees.
  • If your company sets up policies so that only the top management receives the benefits, the IRS will consider them "top-heavy" and taxes will be owed on those benefits, as if they were monetary pay.

More about overtime

Click here for more information about overtime rules.

"Contractors"

Please review Are you an Employer? for information about independent contractor requirements.

Payroll calculator https://www.paycheckcity.com/calculator/salary/

W-4 Federal Allowance Certificate

Each employee must complete a W-4 to declare the number of withholding allowances and to authorize federal income tax withholdings.

Forms to use

W-4 Employees Allowance Certificate

How often?

Required for each employee

When you use W-4

Prior to an employee's first pay date. W-4s remain in effect until an employee submits a new form to reflect a change in marital status or withholding allowances. Employees who claim they are exempt from taxes have to submit these forms annually.

How to complete W-4

Each employee should complete the Personal Allowance Worksheet on the front page. The two worksheets on the back side of Form W-4 are only used if the employee:

  • Itemizes deductions
  • Has two jobs or
  • Is part of a two income family.

More allowances? Less tax withholding

Each federal allowance represents $3,900 in tax withholdings. If an employee regularly receives IRS refunds over $3,900 or has to pay more than $3,900, they should consider adjusting their allowances.

Questions?

Call the IRS information hotline at (800) 829-4933.

I-9: Immigration & Naturalization

The Homeland Security Office requires this form for all employees, regardless of nationality.

You can only ask for this information AFTER you have decided to hire the worker - otherwise it could be considered discrimination.

Forms to use

I-9 Employment Eligibility

Do not discriminate

An I-9 form is required for ALL new hires. As long as the worker can show you the documents discussed below, it is illegal to discriminate in hiring or firing practices. This form is not required for independent contractors or for workers employed by other employers (such as a temporary employment agency).

How often

Required for each new employee

When you use this form

Upon hiring each employee. If you are hiring someone to work for less than three business days, this form MUST be completed with the required documents shown to you prior to beginning work. If the person will work for more than three business days, this form can be completed within three days of hire.

The employee must present ONE of these documents:

  • U.S. Passport
  • Permanent Resident Card
  • Foreign passport
  • I-551 form
  • Employment Authorization Document with a photograph
  • I-766
  • Foreign passport with I-94 or I-94A form
  • Passport from the Federated States of Micronesia or the Republic of the Marshall Islands with I-94 or I-94A

OR a document from this list:

  • Driver's license issued by state or outlying possession of US or by Canada
  • ID card issued by a government ageny in the U.S.
  • School ID with photo
  • U.S. Military Card, draft record, or military dependent's card
  • Voter's registration card
  • Native American tribal document
  • US Coast Guard Merchant Mariner card

IF under 18:

  • School record or report card
  • Clinic, doctor or hospital record
  • Day-care or nursery school record

AND a document from this list:

  • U.S.birth certificate
  • Certificate of Birth Abroad
  • Form FS-545 or DS-1350
  • Social Security account number card
  • Native American tribal document

You cannot choose which documents the worker must show you. Photocopies are not acceptable, except if it is a certified copy of a birth certificate. If you do not believe a form is valid, you may ask for another document from the list. You can also call for assistance at your nearest Immigration Field Office or the Office of Business Liaison (see phone number below).

How to complete

  • The employee must fill out the top half at the time of hire.
  • If someone else fills out the form, that person must sign the Preparer/Translator Certification in the middle of the page.
  • Write each document number and expiration date on the form and sign your name. If you want, you can also make a copy of the document. However you must still record the document number and expiration date on the form.

Where to send the form

Keep them, in case the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service or U.S. Labor Department audits your business.

Remote hires

If you cannot personally see the documents to verify their authenticity, the INS recommends that employers use an agent (a notary public, accountant, attorney or other). Faxed or mailed documents do not satisfy I-9 requirements.

No docs? No Job

Employers should not continue to employ someone who cannot present documentation that meets INS requirements.

How long to keep forms

You must keep I-9 forms until the later of: the employee's termination date plus one year or the employee's third year after hiring.

Additional Information

You can find complete information about I-9 requirements by visiting http://www.uscis.gov/I-9Central

Workers Compensation

Arizona requires employers to carry workers compensation insurance for their employees. This insurance must be obtained from the private market. The largest provider in Arizona is Copperpoint. Here is a Guide to Workers Comp in Arizona.

What to do

Contact your insurance broker to determine your choices for workers compensation coverage. Because of the complexity of the workers' compensation system, most insurance carriers will not give quotes over the phone but will require that you complete a questionnaire so that they can determine your rates based on your exact industry and job classifications.

Time deadlines

Upon hiring your first employee.

Approximate cost

Insurance rates are charged on each $100 of payroll. Although carriers are allowed to determine their own rate, the rates are monitored by the State. Determining rates is very complex and depends on your industry as well as the job types.

Up-front costs

Most businesses must pay a deposit premium The deposit amount is based on the estimated annual premium and the payment schedule. It is common to prepay the entire first year. Often the deposit can be increased to reflect extra risks such as a new business, hazardous activities, etc. Future premium payments may be monthly, quarterly, semi-annually or annually.

Corporate officers, partners and business owners

Corporate officers and partners may be eligible for exclusion from workers' compensation coverage when certain conditions are met. Sole proprietor business owners are automatically excluded unless they specifically request to be covered.

To get a quote, your carrier must know

  • Exactly what work each person will be doing. The rates are based on thousands of job classifications. Your workers comp carrier must determine what classifications apply to your workers. A quote cannot be issued until a risk evaluation questionnaire and any required addenda are completed and signed by the owner, officer or partner of the business. Be as detailed and thorough in your application as possible.
  • If you have previously purchased a workers comp policy. If so, you will need to provide a four year policy history of premiums and claims.
  • If you use independent contractors. If so, you must clearly show that they are legally independent contractors (see Are you an Employer?).
  • If you or other family workers want to be covered.

Warning: Do not simply request workers comp coverage for your independent contractors. The IRS may consider that to be evidence that you are inconsistently treating these workers as both employees and independent contractors, which will invalidate their independent contractor status. Please consult with a labor attorney before taking any action.

Multiple classifications for one employee possible

After your carrier has discussed the classifications chosen for your business, be sure to ask for a list of similar classifications and their rates. In some industries, it is possible for one employee to work in several job classifications. Employers can save in premiums by keeping payroll records that clearly distinguish the type of work done.

Annual audit

Most workers comp carriers will audit your payroll annually and make premium adjustments. The amounts that you pay during the policy year are based on an estimated annual premium. At the expiration of the policy, an audit will be done and a final premium will be determined, resulting in a refund or a bill for additional premium due.

Can you avoid getting coverage?

Workers compensation was developed to protect both your employees and employers. Through this system employees generally cannot sue employers for injuries, but must obtain benefits and any other compensation through the workers compensation system.

A Note about Labor Laws

Hiring employees is an important, but serious step for any business. Regardless of a business' size, employers must comply with a vast number of state and federal laws, or face significant fines. Small businesses are particularly vulnerable to fines because many don't know the laws or keep appropriate records.

Key areas:

Here are some areas of frequent labor disputes.

At will employment and termination

At-will employment means that the employer and employee have a right to terminate their relationship at any time with or without cause. This is invalidated if the employer implies that employees are protected by a higher standard. Avoid making statements (written or oral) regarding job security, anything that implies an employment contract or anything that implies that the employee can only be terminated for specific causes. This is an area of extensive lawsuits.

Arizona allows three exceptions to at-will employment: Public policy, implied-contract, and covenant of good faith and fair dealing. This means that if an employee is fired for filing a workers comp claim or refusing to break a law or there is a general understanding about job security or the employee does not feel their employer dealt with them fairly, the employer can be held for wrongful termination. Wrongful termination can also be extended to employees who quit because "any reasonable person" could not work under those conditions, called "constructive discharge".

Should you use employment contracts?

In general, no. Employment contracts invalidate at-will employment - so you can only fire someone (or an employee can only quit) if it complies with the contract. If you have an employment contract and one party violates it, the other party can seek financial compensation. With that said, employment contracts are sometimes used if the hiring firm wants a key employee to commit to being with the company for a specific period of time, or if a key employee wants the hiring firm to commit to compensation if (s)he is dismissed within a certain period of time. If you want to use an employment contract, it is critical that both parties work with attorneys to protect their interests.

Please note that if you use an employment contract, the person is still your employee, not an independent contractor.

Can you hire workers as independent contractors?

Only if the person is truly in business for him/herself - and you have no RIGHT to control the worker or the work. They can

  • choose to hire others to do the actual work
  • choose their hours
  • choose how to do the work
  • work for others

Click here for more information about independent contractors.

Employee records

Unemployment records must be retained in Arizona for a minimum period of four years. This information generally includes: name; social security number; dates of hire, rehire and termination; wages by period; Payroll pay periods and pay dates; date and circumstances of termination.

If you use independent contractors, do not keep their files with employee records, or use any of the same forms, because they are vendors, not employees.

Pay upon Termination

Fired employees must receive final pay within 3 working days and voluntarily terminated employees must be paid by the next regular payday.

Fair employment

Don't discriminate in age (40+), race, sex, religion, national origin, physical or mental disability (including AIDS), or pregnancy. Provide equal opportunity. Pay equal pay for equal work. Do not retaliate. Do not sexually harass.

Rest and meal breaks

In Arizona there is no provision covering required rest or meal periods.

Right to Work State

Arizona is a Right to Work state, which means employees are not forced to join unions. Click here for more information

Local employee protection laws?

Contact your city to learn about any local employee protection laws affecting private business. Some cities have restrictions regarding computer terminals and some prohibit businesses from discriminating against employees due to their appearance. Some require you to pay sick leave.