Independent Contractor Misclassification in Vermont
Vermont worker classification: ABC test. Misclassification as independent contractor (1099) instead of employee (W-2) creates substantial liability for employers + lost rights for workers.
Published May 8, 2026
## Independent contractor misclassification in Vermont
Workers misclassified as **1099 contractors** lose substantial rights. Employers misclassifying face penalties from multiple agencies.
### Vermont test
ABC test.
## What workers lose when misclassified
- **Minimum wage / overtime** under FLSA
- **Social Security / Medicare contributions** (worker pays both halves)
- **Unemployment insurance** eligibility
- **Workers' compensation** coverage
- **Health insurance** access
- **Retirement plan participation**
- **Family medical leave** rights
- **Anti-discrimination protection** (Title VII, ADA, ADEA)
- **Whistleblower protection**
- **Right to unionize**
- **Reimbursement of expenses**
- **Tax withholding** (estimated taxes required instead)
- **State / local employee benefits**
## What employers gain (improperly)
- Lower payroll tax burden (FICA, FUTA)
- No health benefits requirement
- No retirement contributions
- No unemployment insurance contributions
- No workers' comp premiums
- Easier to terminate
- Reduced HR overhead
Estimated 10-30% labor-cost savings — but at significant legal risk.
## Three main classification tests
**1. ABC Test** (CA, NJ, MA, others):
- (A) Worker is FREE from employer's control
- (B) Work performed is OUTSIDE employer's usual business
- (C) Worker is engaged in INDEPENDENT trade
- ALL three must be met or worker is employee
- The strictest test — hardest to use 1099
**2. Common-law right-of-control test** (IRS):
- 20 factors examining behavioral control, financial control, relationship
- Right to control how work is done = employment
- Most flexible / employer-friendly
**3. Economic-realities test** (DOL):
- 6 factors examining whether worker is economically dependent
- Used for FLSA wage/hour purposes
- 2024 DOL final rule restored "totality of circumstances" approach
## Common misclassification industries
**Heavy misclassification:**
- Trucking / delivery
- Construction (residential)
- Janitorial / cleaning
- Landscaping
- Healthcare (home health, nursing)
- Tech / IT (some)
- Sales (especially in-home sales)
- Beauty / hair salons (booth-rental)
- Gig economy (Uber, DoorDash, Instacart)
- Couriers
## Federal misclassification penalties
**Tax penalties (IRS):**
- 1.5% of wages + 100% of FICA + interest
- Up to 100% in willful cases
- Form 8919 lets employees recover their share
**FLSA back wages:**
- 2-3 years (3 for willful)
- Liquidated damages = double back wages
- Attorney's fees
**ERISA / benefit plan back contributions:**
- Significant for retirement / health benefits
**Social Security / Medicare back contributions**
## State penalties
**Unemployment insurance:**
- Back contributions
- Penalties + interest
- Audit triggers across other agencies
**Workers' compensation:**
- Premium back-payments
- State-specific penalties (CA, NJ severe)
- Personal liability for officers in some states
**State income tax:**
- Back withholding
- Penalties
**State wage / hour:**
- Most states have FLSA-equivalents with stronger remedies
- CA Lab. Code § 226.8 — civil penalties up to $25,000 per misclassified worker
## Common worker remedies
Workers can pursue:
- **Department of Labor (federal)** — wage/hour complaint
- **State labor agency** complaint
- **State unemployment office** — challenge denial
- **State workers' comp board** — file claim
- **EEOC** — discrimination if termination involved
- **Private lawsuit** — individual or class action
- **NLRB** — if related to union activity
- **PAGA action** in CA (private attorney general)
## Reclassification audits
When agencies investigate misclassification:
- Multi-agency coordination common (IRS + state UI + WC)
- One audit often triggers others
- Industry-wide enforcement initiatives
- Whistleblower complaints common trigger
- Tip-line complaints
- Routine UI claim filings (employee files; agency investigates)
## What you should do (workers)
If you suspect you're misclassified in Vermont: file Form SS-8 with IRS for determination, file UI claim if separated, contact state labor agency, and consult an employment attorney. Most Vermont wage-and-hour attorneys work on contingency. Many cases are class actions covering all similarly-situated workers.
## What you should do (employers)
Audit your worker classifications. Misclassification penalties compound across agencies. Consider reclassification under voluntary IRS programs (VCSP) when uncertain. Most employment attorneys offer flat-fee classification audits.
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*This guide is general information about federal and Vermont law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Worker classification has technical state-specific tests. Talk to a licensed Vermont employment attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.