An independent contractor agreement defines the scope of work, payment terms, IP ownership, and relationship between a business and a contractor. It is critical for establishing proper classification and avoiding misclassification penalties.
- Always have a written agreement before work begins
- Include IP assignment, confidentiality, and termination clauses
- The agreement does not override IRS classification — actual practice matters
Key Clauses in a Contractor Agreement
| Clause | Purpose | Key Language |
|---|---|---|
| Relationship definition | Establishes independent contractor status | "Contractor is not an employee" |
| Scope of work | Defines deliverables and responsibilities | Detailed project description |
| Payment terms | Sets compensation, schedule, invoicing | Amount, frequency, net terms |
| IP assignment | Transfers work product ownership | "All deliverables are assigned to Company" |
| Confidentiality | Protects proprietary information | NDA provisions |
| Non-solicitation | Prevents poaching clients/employees | Time-limited restriction |
| Termination | Defines how either party can end the agreement | Notice period, grounds |
| Indemnification | Allocates liability between parties | Each party indemnifies the other |
| Insurance | Requires contractor to carry coverage | General liability, professional liability |
IRS Classification Factors
The IRS evaluates the actual working relationship using three categories of factors outlined in IRS guidance:
| Factor | Employee | Contractor |
|---|---|---|
| Work schedule | Employer sets hours | Contractor sets own hours |
| Tools and equipment | Employer provides | Contractor provides own |
| Training | Employer trains the worker | Contractor already skilled |
| Payment | Regular salary/hourly | Per project or milestone |
| Multiple clients | Works for one employer | Serves multiple clients |
| Benefits | Receives employee benefits | No employee benefits |
| Permanency | Ongoing/indefinite | Project-based/temporary |
A written agreement calling someone a contractor does not make them one. The IRS looks at the actual working relationship. If you set the schedule, provide equipment, and direct the methods, the worker is likely an employee regardless of what the contract says.
Scope of Work and Payment Terms
A well-defined scope of work is critical for both project success and classification purposes:
Define Deliverables Specifically
Set Payment Structure
Specify Timeline
IP Ownership and Confidentiality
Without a written IP assignment clause, the contractor may retain ownership of their work product. Your agreement should address:
Termination Provisions
| Termination Type | Details |
|---|---|
| For convenience | Either party can terminate with written notice (typically 14-30 days) |
| For cause | Immediate termination for breach of contract, misconduct, or non-performance |
| Mutual agreement | Both parties agree to end the engagement |
| Project completion | Agreement automatically terminates when deliverables are accepted |
Specify how payment works upon early termination: is the contractor paid for completed work? Are there kill fees? Who owns partially completed deliverables? Address these questions upfront to avoid disputes.
Frequently Asked Questions
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