2. Form 1099-MISC
If you plan on paying your independent contractor more than $600 for the year, you’ll need to complete a 1099-MISC (Miscellaneous Income) form for tax purposes. While the independent contractor is responsible for their own taxes, you will need to provide one copy of the form to the contractor and a second copy to the IRS (both need to be received no later than January 31 of a given year).
3. Form 1096
This form is for your business purposes and is considered an Annual Summary and Transmittal of U.S. Information Returns. You are to complete this form and it needs to be sent to the Social Security Administration by the end of February, along with copies of all of the 1099 forms from the independent contractors you used who were paid more than $600 for the year.
Other Considerations
You also need to have some sort of contract or signed agreement in place that explains the responsibilities of the independent contractor, how they will be compensated (such as a flat fee per completed project or hourly), who is responsible for supplies or expenses, a confidentiality clause, an indemnity and hold harmless clause, a termination clause, etc. This is a MUST if you are hiring independent contractors, as it protects your LLC and lays out all expectations and guidelines for the job(s) they are being brought on to complete.
It should be noted that the government sees anyone working with you as an employee unless you can prove otherwise. They use three main factors to classify whether the person you hired is an independent contractor or an employee:
Behavioral
Financial
Control
When hiring independent contractors, you need to treat them as such. They are not an employee and you do not control or manage them or their behavior. You cannot tell them when to show up for work, when to punch out for the day, or how many hours they need to work. They also cannot have any control over your business or your day-to-day activities or operations.
All independent contractors should be issuing you invoices once tasks and duties are completed and approved. It is a wise idea to always collect invoices so you have a paper trail you can fall back on should you get audited. Keep all invoices for your records due to the fact that the likelihood of being audited when you use independent contractors is increased.
The Pros of Hiring Independent Contractors
Can save you and your business money
Reduces your risk of lawsuits
Adds a level of flexibility
Allows you to outsource projects without tax liabilities
The Cons of Hiring Independent Contractors
No control over the contractor
If you don’t have work for them, they may go find work elsewhere instead
Firing a contractor needs to be done carefully and according to the termination clause in the signed contract
If they get hurt while working for you, your business can be liable for damages
Some contractors retain all rights to their work completed
The IRS can audit you to ensure contractors are being used as such, rather than being used as employees
If you found this information helpful, Bizee has a ton of great resources for you to use at your disposal. Our blog also contains valuable information that can answer many of the questions you may have surrounding your business and its growth.