In Accounting, Bookkeeping

If you run a construction company, you use subcontractors. That’s just how the industry works. You bring in framers, electricians, plumbers, drywall crews, concrete finishers, and dozens of other trades depending on the project. It’s efficient. It’s flexible. And it keeps your overhead manageable.

But here’s where a lot of contractors get into trouble: not every worker you call a subcontractor actually qualifies as one in the eyes of the IRS.

Misclassifying workers is one of the most common and most expensive mistakes in construction. The IRS has been increasing enforcement on this issue for years, and the penalties for getting it wrong can cripple a small to mid-sized contractor. We’re talking back taxes, interest, penalties, and in some cases, personal liability for the business owner.

The problem is that the rules aren’t always clear, especially in construction where the line between employee and subcontractor can be blurry. Here’s what you need to know to protect your company.

Why the IRS Cares So Much About Classification

This isn’t just a paperwork issue. There’s real money at stake for the government.

When you hire an employee, you’re responsible for withholding federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare from their pay. You also pay the employer’s share of Social Security and Medicare, plus federal and state unemployment taxes. That adds up to roughly 7.65% on top of their wages, plus unemployment contributions.

When you hire a subcontractor, you don’t withhold anything. You pay them the full amount, issue a 1099-NEC at year end, and they’re responsible for their own taxes. No withholding, no employer share, no unemployment contributions from you.

So when a company classifies a worker as a subcontractor who should be an employee, the IRS loses tax revenue. The worker doesn’t get unemployment protection or workers’ comp coverage. And the contractor saves money on payroll taxes they should have been paying.

That’s why the IRS targets this issue aggressively, and construction is one of the industries they look at most closely.

The Common Mistakes Contractors Make

Most contractors don’t misclassify workers on purpose. They do it because they’ve always done it that way, because everyone in the industry does it, or because they genuinely don’t understand the rules. Here are the most common mistakes we see.

The first mistake is assuming that paying someone by the job or by the project automatically makes them a subcontractor. It doesn’t. Payment method is one factor, but it’s not the deciding one. You can pay an employee by the project and they’re still an employee if you control how, when, and where they do the work.

The second mistake is thinking that a signed subcontractor agreement makes someone a subcontractor. A piece of paper doesn’t override reality. If the actual working relationship looks like an employer-employee relationship, the IRS will treat it as one regardless of what the contract says.

The third mistake is classifying workers as subs simply because they asked to be paid that way. A lot of workers prefer 1099 status because they take home more money per check. No withholding means a bigger paycheck. But what the worker prefers has zero legal relevance. The classification is based on the nature of the relationship, not the preference of either party.

The fourth mistake is assuming that because a worker has an LLC or a business name, they’re automatically a subcontractor. Having a business entity is one indicator, but it’s not definitive. If that LLC consists of one person who shows up to your jobsite every day, uses your equipment, follows your schedule, and only works for you, the IRS may still consider them an employee.

How the IRS Actually Determines Classification

The IRS uses a set of factors grouped into three categories to determine whether a worker is an employee or an independent contractor. No single factor is decisive. They look at the overall relationship.

The first category is behavioral control. Does the company control how the worker does the job? If you’re telling someone what tools to use, what methods to follow, what order to complete tasks in, and how to do specific work, that points toward an employee relationship. A true subcontractor controls the means and methods. You tell them what result you need, and they figure out how to get there.

The second category is financial control. Does the worker have a significant investment in their own equipment and tools? Do they have the opportunity to make a profit or suffer a loss? Do they offer their services to the general market, not just to you? Do they have unreimbursed business expenses? A subcontractor typically has their own tools, their own insurance, their own truck, and works for multiple clients. If your worker shows up empty-handed and you provide everything they need, that looks more like an employee.

The third category is the type of relationship. Is there a written contract? Does the worker receive benefits like health insurance, vacation pay, or retirement contributions? Is the relationship ongoing or project-based? Will the relationship continue indefinitely, or does it end when the specific project is complete? Permanent or indefinite relationships suggest employment. A subcontractor comes in for a defined scope, finishes the work, and moves on.

The Red Flags That Trigger an Audit

The IRS doesn’t audit every construction company. But certain patterns increase your chances significantly.

Having a large number of 1099 workers relative to W-2 employees is the biggest red flag. If you have 5 employees and 40 subcontractors, that ratio is going to attract attention.

Workers who were previously employees and are now classified as subcontractors doing the same work is another trigger. If you laid off your framing crew and then brought them back as “independent contractors” doing the same job on the same schedule, that’s a problem.

Subcontractors who work exclusively for you are suspicious. A legitimate subcontractor typically has multiple clients. If someone works 40 hours a week on your jobs and has no other clients, the IRS will question whether they’re truly independent.

Workers filing SS-8 forms is a direct trigger. If a worker you classified as a subcontractor files Form SS-8 with the IRS asking for a determination of their status, the IRS will investigate. This often happens when a worker gets injured and discovers they have no workers’ comp coverage, or when they file for unemployment and get denied because they were classified as a contractor.

The Real Cost of Getting It Wrong

If the IRS reclassifies your subcontractors as employees, the financial consequences are severe.

You’ll owe the employer’s share of Social Security and Medicare taxes for every reclassified worker, going back as far as the IRS chooses to look. That’s 7.65% of every dollar you paid them.

You’ll owe the income tax that should have been withheld from their paychecks. Even though the worker was supposed to pay their own taxes, if you misclassified them, you’re on the hook for the withholding you should have collected.

Interest accrues on all of it from the date the taxes were originally due. And penalties get added on top. The failure to withhold penalty alone can be 1.5% of wages. If the IRS determines the misclassification was intentional, the penalties double and criminal charges become possible.

Then there’s the state side. State tax authorities often follow up after a federal reclassification. You could owe state income tax withholding, state unemployment taxes, and workers’ compensation premiums for every reclassified worker. Some states are even more aggressive than the IRS on this issue.

We’ve seen cases where a contractor thought they were saving money by using subcontractors and ended up owing six figures in back taxes, penalties, and interest after an audit. The savings weren’t worth it.

How to Protect Your Company

The good news is that this is preventable. You don’t have to stop using subcontractors. You just need to make sure the ones you classify as subcontractors actually meet the criteria.

Start by reviewing your current subcontractor relationships honestly. For each person you’re paying on a 1099, ask yourself these questions: Do they provide their own tools and equipment? Do they carry their own insurance? Do they work for other clients? Do they control how and when they do the work? Do they have a real business entity with other customers?

If the answer to most of those questions is no, you might have a classification problem that needs to be addressed.

Make sure you have a current W-9 on file for every subcontractor. Have a written subcontractor agreement that clearly defines the scope, payment terms, and independent nature of the relationship. But remember, the agreement only supports your position if the actual working relationship matches what’s on paper.

Keep documentation. If a sub uses their own truck, their own tools, and their own crew, keep records that demonstrate this. If they work for other companies, note that. The more evidence you have that the relationship is genuinely independent, the stronger your position in an audit.

And if you’re not sure about a specific worker, talk to your CPA before you issue that 1099. It’s much cheaper to get a classification right from the start than to fix it after the IRS shows up.

Don’t Wait for a Letter from the IRS

The worst time to deal with worker classification is after you’ve received an audit notice. By then, the IRS has already identified a problem and you’re playing defense.

The best time to deal with it is now. Review your subcontractor relationships. Fix the ones that don’t hold up. Set up proper documentation for the ones that do. And build a system going forward that makes the right classification from day one.

This is exactly the kind of issue a construction-specialized CPA can help you navigate. The rules are nuanced, the stakes are high, and the cost of doing nothing can be catastrophic.


Xtrategist CPA specializes in accounting and tax strategy for construction companies, tech founders, and professional services in Atlanta and across Georgia. If you’re not sure whether your subcontractor classifications would survive an IRS audit, let’s review them before it becomes a problem.

Schedule a free consultation at xtrategist.com or call (678) 401-6118.

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