Employment status
Your employment status will help define what rights and responsibilities you have at work. Find out the basic employment rights for each employment status.
Main types of employment status
The three main types of employment status are:
- worker
- employee
- self-employed
The definition of 'employee' and 'worker' differs slightly from one area of legislation to another, but generally if rights apply to a 'worker' they also apply to an 'employee'.
Employee
The main people in work are employees. You're classed as an employee if you're working under a contract of employment. A contract need not be in writing - it exists when you and your employer agree terms and conditions of employment.
Rights of employees
As an employee, your employer is obliged by law to take off Income Tax and National Insurance contributions from your salary or wages before paying them to you. You're also entitled to all minimum legal employment rights including:
- statutory sick pay
- maternity, adoption and paternity leave and pay
- the right not to be unfairly dismissed
- legal redundancy pay
- all the rights that are given to 'workers' (below)
Some of these rights require a minimum length of continuous employment before an employee qualifies for them. An employment contract may state how long this qualification period is.
Worker
A worker is any individual who works for an employer, whether under a contract of employment, or any other contract where an individual undertakes to do personally any work or services.
Workers are entitled to core employment rights and protections. The following groups of people are likely to be workers but not employees:
- most agency workers
- short term casual workers
- some freelancers
Rights of workers
Providing any other qualifying conditions are met, all workers have rights to:
- the National Minimum Wage
- rest breaks, paid holiday and limits on night work
- protection against unauthorised deductions from pay
- maternity, paternity and adoption pay (but not leave)
- protection against less favourable treatment if you make a disclosure in the public interest (often called ‘whistleblowing’)
- not be discriminated against unlawfully
- Working time limits (the 48-hour week)
- Holiday entitlements
- Working at night
- Being paid and payslips
- Sick pay rights
- Blowing the whistle on workplace wrongdoing
- Introduction to discrimination
Self-employed
If you’re self-employed, you do not have a contract of employment with an employer. You’re more likely to be contracted to provide services over a certain period of time for a fee and be in business in your own right. You’ll also pay your own tax and National Insurance Contributions.
You don't have employment rights as such if you're self-employed as you are your own boss and can therefore decide how much to charge for your work and how much holiday to give yourself.
You do have some legal protection. You must not be discriminated against and you're entitled to a safe and healthy working environment on your client's premises.
Self-employed women who have recently left their jobs may be entitled to Maternity Allowance.
It is possible, in some limited cases, to be self-employed for tax purposes but classified as a 'worker' or an 'employee' for employment rights purposes.
Work out your employment status for employment rights
There is no one thing that completely determines your employment status. If there is a dispute about your status between you and the person or company for whom you work, an Industrial Tribunal will make its decision based on all the circumstances of a case.
The tribunal's decision will depend on four main categories:
- control
- integration
- mutuality of obligations
- economic reality
Below are some questions to help explain what the categories mean. Try thinking about it as a sliding scale with 'employee' at one end and 'genuinely self-employed' at the other.
The more questions you answer 'yes' to, the more likely it is that you are self-employed. If you answer 'no' to most of the questions then you are likely to be an employee.
If you answer yes to some of the questions, in particular 'you can decide when you will work' and 'can turn down work when offered', 'your employer offers work only as it becomes available' and 'you are not in business on your own account', you are likely to be considered a 'worker' rather than 'employee'.
This is guidance only and a definitive answer can only be given by an Industrial Tribunal or court. You should get advice from an expert if you are unsure.
Control
Control is the extent to which the employer decides what tasks you do and how you do them:
- do you have the final say in how the business is run
- can you choose whether to do the work yourself, or send someone else
- can you choose when and how you will work
Integration
Integration is the extent to which you're part of the organisation:
- if you need help, are you responsible for hiring other people and setting their terms of employment
- are you excluded from internal company matters such as corporate training and staff meetings
- are you free from having action taken against you using the company disciplinary procedure
- are you excluded from company benefits and pension schemes
Mutuality of obligations
Mutuality of obligations means the extent to which your employer is required to offer you work and whether you're expected to do it:
- does your employer offer work only if and when it is available
- can you decide when you will work and can you turn down work when offered
Economic reality
Economic reality refers to the extent to which you bear the financial risk:
- are you responsible for meeting the losses as well as taking the profits
- are you responsible for correcting unsatisfactory work at your own expense
- do you have to send an invoice to the company for your pay
- do you get a fixed payment for a job - including materials and labour
- do you provide the main items of equipment needed to do the job
- do you work for a range of different employers
- Industrial Tribunals (Industrial Tribunals and the Fair Employment Tribunal website)
Problems with your employer
If you have a disagreement with your employer about your status and associated rights (for example, if your employer is refusing you holiday pay because they say you're self-employed), try to resolve the matter with them directly first of all. If you have a workplace representative (for example a trade union official), they may be able to help.
Where to get help
The Labour Relations Agency (LRA) and Advice NI offer free, confidential and impartial advice on all employment rights issues for residents of Northern Ireland.
If you are a member of a trade union, you can get help, advice and support from them.