Worker misclassification sounds like a paperwork issue. It's not. In California, it's one of the most expensive mistakes a business owner can make.
When you classify a worker as an independent contractor instead of an employee, you skip payroll taxes, workers' comp, unemployment insurance, overtime rules, and benefits. That saves you 20-30% per worker. Which is exactly why California's Employment Development Department (EDD) and the IRS look for it aggressively.
If you're wrong about the classification, you don't just owe what you should have paid. You owe that plus penalties, plus interest, plus potential lawsuits from the workers themselves. For a business with five misclassified workers over two years, the total exposure can reach six figures.
California and the IRS use different tests to determine whether someone is a contractor or employee.
Assembly Bill 5 (AB5) is a California law signed in 2019 that established the ABC test as the official standard for worker classification in the state. Before AB5, California courts used a more flexible common law test similar to the federal IRS test. AB5 replaced that with a stricter, three-factor standard: the ABC test. Businesses must use it to determine whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor. All three factors have to be met to classify someone as a contractor. If any one fails, the worker is an employee under California law.
The IRS Test (Common Law): Looks at three categories: behavioral control (do you control how the work is done?), financial control (do you control the business aspects of the work?), and relationship type (is there a written contract, benefits, permanency?). It's a balancing test with no single deciding factor.
California's ABC Test (AB5): Presumes the worker is an employee. To classify them as a contractor, you must prove ALL THREE of the following:
|
Test |
Approach |
Burden of proof |
Difficulty |
|
IRS Common Law |
Multi-factor balancing |
IRS must prove misclassification |
Moderate |
|
California ABC (AB5) |
Three-part, must pass all three |
Business must prove contractor status |
High |
There are narrow exemptions for specific professions (licensed professionals, certain creatives, business-to-business relationships), but they have their own qualifying criteria. Don't assume the worker qualifies without checking.
David owns a small construction company in Fresno with eight workers, all classified as independent contractors. He paid them hourly, provided tools, set their schedules, and directed their work. He issued 1099s instead of W-2s because that's what the previous owner did.
An EDD audit reclassified all eight workers as employees, with a total assessment of nearly $47,000.
That doesn't include the workers' comp exposure. If any of those workers had been injured on the job during the misclassification period, David would have been personally liable.
Classifying workers based on what's convenient (1099 is cheaper) instead of what's legally correct under the ABC test.
California is the strictest state in the country for worker classification. The ABC test under AB5 flipped the presumption: everyone is an employee unless you can prove otherwise. Most states still use the more flexible IRS-style common law test.
California-specific consequences include:
EDD penalties: California's Employment Development Department assesses back state payroll taxes, unemployment insurance, and state disability insurance, plus penalties of up to 15% of the amount owed.
Labor Code violations: Misclassified workers can file claims for unpaid overtime, meal and rest break violations, unreimbursed business expenses, and other protections they would have had as employees.
FTB reporting: The FTB can assess additional penalties for failing to withhold California income tax from employees.
DLSE enforcement: The Division of Labor Standards Enforcement can issue penalties of $5,000 to $25,000 per violation for willful misclassification.
Private lawsuits: Workers can sue individually or as a class. California's Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA) allows workers to bring actions on behalf of the state, with penalties that add up fast.
One of the most common questions we get from new clients is straightforward: Should I bring this person on as a contractor or an employee? The answer starts with two tests. The IRS has guidance on its common law test at irs.gov, and California's ABC test resources are at edd.ca.gov, and we'll walk you through both. If the answer still isn't clear, or the situation involves contracts, liability, or workplace policies, that's when we refer you to an HR specialist or employment attorney. Our lane is payroll and tax setup; the legal layer needs a different expert.
Misclassification isn't a gray area in California. The ABC test is clear, the penalties are steep, and enforcement is active. The EDD collects over $100 million per year in misclassification assessments. If your classification doesn't hold up, the cost of correcting it voluntarily is a fraction of what it costs when an agency finds it first.
If you're not sure whether your contractors pass the ABC test, or you know they don't and need a plan, talk to NCO. If workers need to move to payroll, that's where we come in. We'll get payroll set up correctly and make sure your 1099s and W-2s are handled at year end. For the legal and compliance piece, we'll point you to the right employment attorney.