Contractor vs Employee in Ontario: Where Misclassification Actually Creates Liability

  • HOME
  • /
  • BLOG
  • /
  • Contractor vs Employee in Ontario: Where Misclassification Actually Creates Liability

Contractor vs Employee in Ontario: Where Misclassification Actually Creates Liability

Most businesses do not intentionally misclassify workers.

They make practical decisions.

Someone is brought on as a contractor for flexibility. Payment is structured through invoices. The arrangement continues over time. The individual becomes integrated into the business.

At some point, the legal characterization no longer matches the reality.

That is where liability begins.

The Legal Distinction Is Not What the Contract Says

In Ontario, whether someone is a contractor or an employee is not determined by the label used in the agreement.

It is determined by how the relationship functions in practice.

Control, ownership of tools, financial risk, and integration into the business all factor into the analysis. No single element is decisive. The classification emerges from the overall structure of the relationship.

This means that a written contractor agreement can exist alongside an employment relationship in substance.

How Misclassification Develops

Misclassification rarely happens at the outset.

It develops over time.

A contractor begins working more regularly. Their role becomes central to operations. They take direction in the same way as employees. They rely on the business as their primary source of income.

The structure remains unchanged, but the reality shifts.

The agreement does not update itself to reflect that shift.

What Liability Actually Looks Like

The risk is not abstract.

If a contractor is found to be an employee, the business may be responsible for:

  • Unpaid vacation and holiday pay
  • Statutory notice or severance
  • CPP and EI contributions
  • Potential tax reassessments
  • Wrongful dismissal exposure

These obligations are not negotiated after the fact. They are imposed.

The CRA and Common Law Are Not Identical

Two parallel analyses apply.

The CRA focuses on tax classification, using a structured test based on control, ownership of tools, chance of profit, and risk of loss.

Courts apply a broader common law test, focusing on the total relationship, including dependency and integration.

A relationship can pass one test and fail the other.

That is where businesses are often caught off guard.

Where Misclassification Creates Friction

Most businesses discover the issue at a specific moment.

A contractor relationship ends and a claim is made. The CRA conducts a review. A financing or acquisition process requires classification clarity.

At that point, the structure is examined against reality.

If they do not align, the exposure becomes immediate.

The Secondary Effects

Misclassification does not operate in isolation.

It affects:

  • Intellectual property ownership
  • Enforceability of restrictive covenants
  • Validity of termination provisions

A contractor who is legally an employee may not be bound by terms that assume an independent relationship.

The issue spreads across the legal structure.

The Practical Question

The relevant question is not how the relationship was originally structured.

It is whether the current reality supports that structure.

That requires looking at how the individual actually works within the business, not just what the agreement says.

Where This Leads

Most businesses do not assess this proactively.

They assess it when something forces the issue.

By then, the relationship has already developed, and the exposure has already accrued.

Understanding that gap is the starting point.


Related


You may also like

>