Over 59 million Americans freelance or work as independent contractors. Despite that scale, protections are far weaker than for traditional employees. Understanding your rights — and how to enforce them — is essential for anyone working independently.
Employee vs. Independent Contractor: Why It Matters
The classification determines your legal protections. Employees get minimum wage, overtime, workers' comp, unemployment insurance, and employer-paid payroll taxes. Contractors generally get none of those — but misclassification is illegal.
Factor
Employee
Independent Contractor
Who controls how work is done
Employer
Worker
Tools and equipment
Employer provides
Worker provides own
Multiple clients
Typically no
Yes
Set hours
Yes
Usually no
Tax withholding
Employer withholds
Worker pays own taxes
Benefits eligible
Yes
No
ABC Test (California AB5 and similar laws): Many states use the ABC test — you're an employee unless: (A) you're free from the company's control, (B) the work is outside the usual course of business, and (C) you're customarily engaged in an independently established trade. This test is harder for companies to satisfy.
Essential Contract Protections
Never work without a written contract. At minimum, your agreement should cover:
Scope of work — exactly what you will and won't deliver
Payment terms — amount, due date, late fees (1.5%/month is standard)
Kill fee — payment if client cancels after work begins (typically 25-50%)
IP ownership — who owns the work product (default: you, unless "work for hire")
Revision limits — number of revision rounds included
Termination clause — notice required before ending the engagement
Dispute resolution — jurisdiction, arbitration vs. litigation
Collecting Unpaid Invoices
1
Send a formal demand letter — give 14 days to pay with a late fee warning. Use certified mail.
2
File in small claims court — limits range from $5,000–$25,000 by state. No lawyer needed, low filing fees.
3
Report to freelance protection programs — NYC Freelance Isn't Free Act requires payment within 30 days; violations carry double damages.
4
Use mechanics liens — for creative or construction work, a lien on the client's property is a powerful collection tool.
Non-Disclosure and Non-Compete Agreements
Be careful about what you sign. Key points:
NDAs are generally enforceable — keep client information confidential as agreed
Non-competes for contractors are more suspect than for employees — courts scrutinize them heavily
California, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Oklahoma ban non-competes for both employees and contractors
Overly broad non-solicitation clauses that prevent you from working in your industry may be unenforceable
Work-for-hire clauses transfer copyright automatically — negotiate if you want to retain your work
Tax Obligations for Freelancers
Self-employment tax: 15.3% on net self-employment income (covers Social Security and Medicare)
Quarterly estimated taxes: Pay in April, June, September, and January to avoid penalties
1099-NEC: Clients must send you a 1099 for payments over $600/year
Deductible expenses: Home office, equipment, software, professional development, health insurance premiums
SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k): Contribute up to $66,000/year for retirement while reducing taxable income
Misclassification Remedy: If you've been misclassified as a contractor when you should be an employee, you can file a complaint with the Department of Labor, your state labor board, or the IRS (Form SS-8). Back taxes, overtime, and benefits may be recoverable.
Gig Platform Worker Rights
Uber, DoorDash, TaskRabbit, and similar platforms have faced major classification battles:
California's Prop 22 (2020) carved out app-based drivers as contractors with limited benefits
Several states are passing "portable benefits" legislation
The DOL's 2024 contractor rule makes it harder to classify workers as contractors under federal law
Gig workers can still organize collectively (protected by the NLRA in some circumstances)
Platform workers injured on the job may have limited workers' comp options — check your state
FAQ: Freelancer Rights
Can a client refuse to pay if they don't like the work? +
If you delivered what the contract required, no — they cannot simply refuse payment because of subjective dissatisfaction. Document all approvals and communications. If your contract requires approval at each stage, get sign-offs in writing. A client who refuses to pay for completed work per contract terms can be sued in small claims court.
Who owns work I create as a freelancer? +
By default under copyright law, you own work you create — even if you were paid. Clients only get ownership if: (1) you sign a written "work for hire" agreement, or (2) the work falls into a narrow category of "specially commissioned" works. Read your contract carefully — many clients include broad IP assignments that transfer all rights to them.
Can I get unemployment insurance as a freelancer? +
Traditionally no — unemployment insurance covers employees. During COVID-19, the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) program temporarily covered gig workers and freelancers. Some states like Washington have expanded eligibility. If you believe you were misclassified, filing for unemployment may trigger a classification review.
What is a safe harbor for contractors? +
The IRS Section 530 safe harbor protects businesses from back taxes if they had a "reasonable basis" for treating workers as contractors (prior audit, industry practice, or reasonable reliance on advice of counsel). It doesn't help the worker get benefits, but it's relevant if you're negotiating with a company about reclassification.
Do I need a business license to freelance? +
It depends on your city, state, and profession. Many jurisdictions require a general business license for any self-employed person. Some professions (lawyers, doctors, contractors, accountants) require professional licenses. Forming an LLC is optional but can provide liability protection and tax benefits.
What if a client files a false chargeback against me? +
Dispute the chargeback with your payment processor immediately (Stripe, PayPal, etc.). Provide your contract, invoice, proof of delivery, and all communications. "Services rendered" chargebacks are often winnable with documentation. Repeatedly abusing chargebacks is fraud — you can report it to your state AG and, in egregious cases, pursue the client civilly.