Objective
- Advise clients with respect to the risks associated with their treating workers as independent contractors rather than employees
- Understand how to employ Section 530 for purposes of defending against an IRS allegation that one or more workers are employees and not independent contractors
Highlights
- The 20 common law factors in a worker classification audit that are used to distinguish an employee from an independent contractor
- How disgruntled independent contractors can use IRS Form 8919 against a former employer
- When and how to use §530 as a defense in worker classification audits
- What is "industry practice" for §530 purposes
- Common sense steps that will avoid the recharacterization of workers treated as independent contractors to employees
- The IRS’s Voluntary Classification Settlement Program — advantages and disadvantages
Designed For
Any tax practitioner who wishes to help their clients avoid having independent contractors reclassified by the IRS as employees and any tax practitioner whose clients currently use independent contractors rather than employeesPrerequisite
Knowledge of basic individual income tax principlesAdvanced Preparation
None