---
title: "Hiring Contractors in Ireland 2026"
description: "Ireland contractor classification 2026: the five-step Karshan test, the free Scope Section ruling, and why three bodies can each reclassify a worker."
canonical: https://www.teamed.global/contractor-hiring-guides/ireland
---

Ireland · Contractor hiring

Served by Teamed vetted partner-entity network in Ireland

# How do you engage *contractors* in Ireland compliantly in 2026?

Since the Supreme Court's 2023 Karshan ruling, contractor or employee in Ireland turns on a five-step substance test, not the label on a contract for service. Three separate bodies can each reclassify the person, and the back payroll tax lands on you, not on them.

Last reviewed 14 June 2026 · Ireland guide

## How Teamed handles Ireland contractor engagement for you

Teamed gives you one place to engage people in Ireland the right way. Where the work is genuinely independent, you document and defend that position. Where it is employment in substance, Teamed becomes your legal [employer of record](/lp/employer-of-record) from [**from $599 per employee per month**](/pricing).

**Real HR and legal experts** run the engagement, with **zero FX mark-up** in any currency.

**An actual person**, not a chatbot or a pooled queue, handles your Ireland hires on **one platform** alongside contractor onboarding, EOR, and entity payroll. There is **no setup fee** and **no exit fee**. Statutory employer cost **passes through at cost, itemised** on every invoice.

An Ireland contractor who should be an employee can move onto employment without re-onboarding, and that same employee can later **graduate** from EOR to your own Ireland entity on the same platform under Teamed's Graduation Model. The hard part here is not paying a contractor. It is proving they were one. EOR is the right model for a close call, **until it isn't**.

Three things you won't find on any other Ireland EOR guide

- **The test changed in 2023, and most Ireland contractor guides have not caught up.** The Supreme Court's Karshan (Domino's Pizza) judgment set a [five-step framework](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/code-of-practice-on-determining-employment-status/) that is now built into the Code of Practice on Determining Employment Status. The words on a contract for service are not the test.
- **You can get the state's view on status for free, with no form to fill in.** The Department of Social Protection's [Scope Section](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/operational-guidelines-scope-section-insurability-for-prsi-purposes/) makes a formal decision on whether an engagement is insurable as employment or self-employment, at no published fee and with no application form.
- **Three different bodies can reclassify the same contractor, and none binds the others.** The Department of Social Protection rules on PRSI class, Revenue rules on tax, and the WRC rules on employment rights. A clean answer from one is not a clean answer from all three.

Answer.cite this

Engaging a contractor in Ireland is a classification call before it is a payment call. A genuine contractor invoices you, runs their own tax, and carries their own business risk. If the working arrangement is employment in substance, the label on the contract for service does not save it [Code of Practice on Determining Employment Status].

Since the Supreme Court's 2023 Karshan judgment, status is decided under a five-step framework: is there a wage-for-work bargain, does the worker supply their own services rather than a substitute's, does the business exercise enough control to make the deal capable of being employment, and then the whole working picture is weighed before any specific legislative test is applied [Code of Practice on Determining Employment Status].

Get it wrong and the engaging business, not the worker, repays the back income tax, USC, and both the employee and employer PRSI, with interest that would otherwise run at about 10 percent a year [Revenue; Taxes Consolidation Act 1997]. Three bodies can each reach that finding, and none binds the others.

Teamed engages and pays your Ireland contractors compliantly on one platform, and employs them through an EOR where the classification is too close to risk. An EOR fixes the next engagement. It does not erase the last one.

At a glance · Ireland

EUR · English · Substance over contract

The risk

Misclassification

a contractor who is an employee in substance

The test

Karshan five-step

Code of Practice on Determining Employment Status

Who can decide status

Three bodies

DSP (PRSI), Revenue (tax), WRC (rights)

Advance status ruling

€0

DSP Scope Section, no application form

Disclosure window

2 tax years

post-Karshan concession covered 2024 and 2025

Default interest

10%

approx. per annum on back payroll tax

VAT threshold (services)

€42,500

supplying services only

Standard VAT rate

23%

effective 1 January 2026

![A freelance contractor in Dublin working at a desk by a window, with an invoice, a laptop, and a mug of tea, the Georgian rooftops and a slice of the Liffey visible outside.](/images/country-guides/ireland-contractor.webp)

Ireland · advance status ruling · cost to ask the state

€

0

The Department of Social Protection's Scope Section will decide, on the record, whether your engagement is employment or self-employment. There is no application form and no published fee. Asking costs nothing. Getting it wrong does not.

DSP Scope Section

No application form

Decision binds PRSI class

Ask before the work starts

## What separates a genuine contractor from an employee in Ireland?

No single factor decides it. Since the Supreme Court's 2023 Karshan judgment, status runs through a five-step framework set out in the Code of Practice on Determining Employment Status, and the whole working picture is weighed together.

The markers that point to a genuine contractor are: bearing the cost of putting faulty work right, being free to hire others to do the job, serving several clients at once, controlling how, when and where the work is done, and being able to profit from running the work well.

Ireland decides employment status under a substance test, not a contract label. The Code of Practice runs three threshold questions first: *"does the contract involve the exchange of wage or other remuneration for work? if so, is the agreement one where the worker is agreeing to provide their own services, and not those of a third party, to the business? if so, does the business exercise sufficient control over the worker to render the agreement one that is capable of being an employment agreement?"* [[Code of Practice on Determining Employment Status](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/code-of-practice-on-determining-employment-status/)]. If all three are met, *"all of the circumstances of the arrangement"* must then be considered before any specific legislative test is applied.

You read the markers together. The more an arrangement leans toward the left column, the more it looks like employment.

| Marker | Points to employment (risk) | Points to a genuine contractor (safer) |
| --- | --- | --- |
| **Control** | The business sets what work is done, and how, when and where it is done. | The worker decides how, when and where the work is done, and whether they or someone else does it. |
| **Substitution** | The person must do the work themselves. No real freedom to send someone else. | Free to hire other people, on terms they specify, to carry out the agreed work [[Code of Practice](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/code-of-practice-on-determining-employment-status/)]. |
| **Enterprise (economic reality)** | No real business of their own. Paid like a salary, no investment, no risk of profit or loss. | Exposed to financial risk for faulty work, can profit from sound management, looks like a business in their own right. |
| **Integration** | Embedded in the team and systems as part of the business. | Delivers a result from outside the organisation, can serve more than one client at the same time. |
| **Mutuality of obligation** | A continuing duty to offer and to accept work. | Each engagement is a discrete piece of work, with no standing obligation either way. |

In plain words

You cannot contract your way out of employment in Ireland. Calling someone self-employed or signing a contract for service does not decide it: *"they do not on their own determine the employment status"* [[Code of Practice](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/code-of-practice-on-determining-employment-status/)]. The substance of the relationship does, and the bill for getting it wrong lands on the engager.

## How do you get an official ruling on a contractor's status in Ireland?

Ask the Department of Social Protection's Scope Section. It makes a formal decision on whether an engagement is insurable as employment or as self-employment, and either the worker or the business can apply.

There is no application form and no published fee. Treat it as the threshold question on PRSI class, then read the limits below: a Scope decision does not bind Revenue or the WRC.

Ireland gives you a way to remove some of the guesswork. The function of Scope Section is *"to make decisions and provide information and advice on PRSI insurability"*, and *"anyone seeking information, advice or a decision regarding their insurability or the insurability of their workers for PRSI can apply to Scope Section (no application form involved)"* [[DSP Scope Section operational guidelines](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/operational-guidelines-scope-section-insurability-for-prsi-purposes/)]. There is no fee set out on the page, so the cost to ask is €0.

### What a Scope decision settles, and what it does not

A Scope decision settles the PRSI class. It does not settle the tax treatment or any employment-rights claim, because three statutory bodies decide status independently and *"decisions of the Department of Social Protection or the WRC or Revenue are not binding on each other"* [[Code of Practice](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/code-of-practice-on-determining-employment-status/)]. So a contractor can be confirmed self-employed for PRSI and still be reclassified by Revenue for tax, or by the WRC on an employment-rights complaint.

Practical tip

For any engagement you are not sure about, ask Scope Section before the work starts and keep the decision on file. Where the picture clearly points to employment, engage the person through an EOR from day one instead. Both remove the uncertainty.

## What does contractor misclassification actually cost in Ireland?

On reclassification, the engaging business, not the worker, repays the back income tax, USC, and both the employee and employer PRSI in full, with PRSI records created for each affected person.

Outside any concession, interest on the back payroll tax would otherwise run at about 10 percent a year, and the statutory PAYE and PRSI interest rate is 0.0274% for every day the payment is late.

This is the part that catches engagers out. In Ireland the bill for misclassification falls on the engaging business, and it is built from several layers.

| Cost layer | What it means | Source |
| --- | --- | --- |
| **Back tax, USC, and both-sides PRSI** | The engager *"must either pay the liability to income tax, USC and PRSI (both employee and employer) in full"*, with PRSI calculated on an actual basis and records updated for each worker. | [Matheson, Karshan disclosure guidance](https://www.matheson.com/insights/new-revenue-guidance-karshan-disclosure-opportunity/) |
| **Default interest** | Late payment interest *"which would otherwise apply at c. 10% per annum"* on the arrears, outside the time-limited concession. That is roughly 10 percent a year. | [Matheson](https://www.matheson.com/insights/new-revenue-guidance-karshan-disclosure-opportunity/) (TCA 1997 s.1080) |
| **Daily payroll-tax interest** | On late PAYE and PRSI, *"the rate of interest is 0.0274% for every day the payment is late"*. | [Revenue](https://www.revenue.ie/en/employing-people/paying-your-employees-tax-to-revenue/paying-tax-to-revenue.aspx) |
| **Late-filing penalty** | Added tax of 5% of the amount due applies where a return is under two months late, rising to 10% where it is two months or more late. | [TCA 1997 s.1084](https://www.charteredaccountants.ie/taxsourcetotal/1997/en/act/pub/0039/nfg/sec1084-nfg.html) |
| **Three doors, none binding the others** | The Department of Social Protection, Revenue, and the WRC each decide status, and a clean finding from one does not protect you from the next. | [Code of Practice](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/code-of-practice-on-determining-employment-status/) |

Read the layers together. The engager repays the contributions it never deducted, on top of its own employer PRSI, and the interest compounds over the period the person was treated as a contractor. On a multi-year engagement that runs into serious money for a single misclassified person.

The honest read

The most expensive part is rarely a single penalty. It is the back income tax, USC, and both-sides PRSI you cannot recover from the worker, plus interest, for the whole period. Getting the call right up front costs almost nothing by comparison.

## How do you engage and pay an Ireland contractor compliantly?

Decide the status honestly before you sign. If the work is genuinely independent, contract for a result, let the contractor use their own tools and set their own hours, pay against their invoices, and keep them free to serve other clients.

If the work is really employment, engage the person through an EOR instead. When it is close, ask the Scope Section first and keep the decision.

A clean Ireland contractor engagement follows a simple sequence.

1. Assess the status before you sign Hold the planned arrangement against the Karshan five-step framework: the wage-for-work bargain, personal service and substitution, control, the whole working picture, and any specific legislative test. If it leans toward employment, stop and treat it as employment.
2. Ask the Scope Section where it is close For any engagement you are not sure about, ask the Department of Social Protection's [Scope Section](https://www.gov.ie/en/department-of-social-protection/publications/operational-guidelines-scope-section-insurability-for-prsi-purposes/) for a decision on PRSI insurability. There is no application form and no published fee. Remember it binds the PRSI class only, not Revenue or the WRC.
3. Contract for a result, not a routine Define the deliverable. Avoid fixed hours, a fixed desk, required attendance at internal meetings, and language that puts the contractor under day-to-day direction. A contract that describes managed, hourly, on-site work is itself evidence of employment.
4. Keep the contractor independent in practice Let them use their own equipment, set their own schedule, carry their own risk, and keep serving other clients. The reality has to match the contract, because the decision-maker reads the reality, not the wording.
5. Pay against invoices and keep the file The contractor invoices you and you pay gross. You do not run them through payroll. Hold the contract, the Scope decision, the invoices, and the record of how the work actually ran. If a body ever asks, that file is your defence.

[Why an EOR does not cure prior misclassification](#eor-doesnt-solve)

## Does an EOR fix prior contractor misclassification in Ireland?

No. Moving an at-risk contractor onto employment turns the relationship into formal employment going forward, which can read as confirmation the person was an employee all along. It does not undo the earlier period.

The back payroll tax for that prior time still stands, and Revenue, the Department of Social Protection, and the WRC can each look at it. An EOR is the clean answer only when the engagement is genuinely employment from the start.

The logic mirrors the test itself. Classification asks whether the working arrangement is employment in substance. If you take a contractor who already looked like an employee and put them onto an EOR, you have made the employment explicit. Any of the three bodies can read that as evidence the relationship was employment all along, which is the finding you were trying to avoid.

And it does nothing for the past. Revenue's time-limited post-Karshan disclosure window, with a deadline of 30 January 2026, regularised only 2 tax years (2024 and 2025) for bona-fide errors, and it did not cover any compliance check open before the Karshan judgment. Switching someone to employment now does not erase the months or years they were treated as a contractor.

### So when is EOR the right move?

When the engagement is honestly assessed as employment from day one. If you know the work is full-time, integrated, and directed, do not dress it up as contracting and hope. Engage the person as an employee through an EOR from the start. Teamed becomes the legal employer in Ireland, runs payroll, PAYE, USC, and PRSI correctly, and the classification question never arises.

|  | Genuine contractor | Employment via EOR |
| --- | --- | --- |
| Right when | Independent, multi-client, own tools and risk, you buy a result. | Full-time, long-term, directed, integrated, single-client in substance. |
| Who runs the tax | The contractor, on their own account. | Teamed, as the legal employer, PAYE, USC and PRSI from day one. |
| Misclassification risk | Carried by the engager if the reality is employment. | Removed. It is employment by design. |
| How you pay | Against the contractor's invoices, gross. | One starting fee per employee, statutory cost passed through at cost. |

The one-line version

An EOR prevents the next misclassification. It does not erase the last one. Classify right at the start.

## VAT and invoicing basics for Ireland contractors

A genuine Ireland contractor invoices you and handles their own tax. They must register for VAT once their turnover from supplying services only goes over €42,500 in any rolling 12 months, and then charge the standard rate of 23% on most services.

The threshold is higher for goods, at €85,000. None of this changes the classification question.

VAT is separate from the status question, but engagers ask, so here is the short version.

The registration threshold is *"€42,500, in the case of persons supplying services only"*, and *"€85,000, for persons supplying goods"* [[Revenue VAT thresholds](https://www.revenue.ie/en/vat/vat-registration/who-should-register-for-vat/vat-thresholds.aspx)]. A contractor supplying services who goes over €42,500 must register, then charge the standard rate of 23%, effective 1 January 2026, on most services and show it as a separate line on the invoice [[Revenue VAT rates](https://www.revenue.ie/en/vat/vat-rates/search-vat-rates/current-vat-rates.aspx)]. You pay the gross amount.

A contractor under the €42,500 services threshold can stay unregistered and charge no VAT. They may still register voluntarily, often to reclaim VAT on their own costs.

Don't confuse the two

VAT and classification are different questions. A contractor can invoice you perfectly, with correct VAT, and still be an employee in substance. Clean invoicing does not make someone a genuine contractor. The working arrangement does.

## Frequently asked questions

Is an Ireland contractor decided by the contract or by how they work?

By how they work. Since the Supreme Court's 2023 Karshan judgment, Ireland decides employment status under a five-step framework set out in the Code of Practice on Determining Employment Status. Describing someone as self-employed or signing a contract for service does not decide it. The decision-maker weighs the wage-for-work bargain, personal service and substitution, control, and the whole working picture.

How can I get an official ruling on a contractor's status in Ireland?

Ask the Department of Social Protection's Scope Section. It makes a formal decision on whether an engagement is insurable as employment or self-employment, and either the worker or the business can apply. There is no application form and no published fee, so the cost to ask is €0. A Scope decision settles the PRSI class only, not the tax treatment or any employment-rights claim.

Can more than one body reclassify the same contractor in Ireland?

Yes. Three statutory bodies decide status independently: the Department of Social Protection on PRSI class, Revenue on tax, and the Workplace Relations Commission on employment rights. Their decisions are not binding on each other, so a contractor can be confirmed self-employed by one and still be reclassified by another.

What does contractor misclassification cost an engager in Ireland?

On reclassification the engaging business, not the worker, repays the back income tax, USC, and both the employee and employer PRSI in full. Outside any concession, interest on the back payroll tax would otherwise run at about 10 percent a year, the statutory PAYE and PRSI interest rate is 0.0274% for every day the payment is late, and late filing adds tax of 5% rising to 10%.

Does putting a contractor through an EOR fix prior misclassification?

No. Moving an at-risk contractor onto an Employer of Record turns the relationship into formal employment going forward, which can read as confirmation the person was an employee all along. It does not undo the prior period, and the back payroll tax for that earlier time still stands. Revenue's time-limited post-Karshan disclosure window covered only the 2 tax years 2024 and 2025. An EOR is the clean answer when the engagement is genuinely employment from the start.

When does an Ireland contractor have to register for VAT?

A contractor supplying services only must register for VAT once turnover goes over €42,500 in any rolling 12 months. The threshold for supplying goods is €85,000. Once registered, the contractor charges the standard rate of 23%, effective 1 January 2026, on most services and shows it as a separate line on the invoice. Below the threshold they can stay unregistered, though they may register voluntarily.

Teamed Legal Operations

In Ireland the contract for service is the least important document in the room. Since Karshan, the decision-maker reads how the work actually ran through a five-step test. If it was employment in substance, three separate bodies can each say so, and the back payroll tax lands on the engager, not the contractor.

A note from Tom Price-Daniel

In Ireland, the contract says contractor. The Karshan test reads the working arrangement.  
Those are different documents, and three bodies can each reach the harder reading.  
Classify right at the start, or engage through an EOR. An EOR prevents the next mistake. It does not erase the last one.

Tom Price-Daniel · Co-founder, Teamed

## Keep reading

- [Hiring contractors in the United Kingdom](/contractor-hiring-guides/united-kingdom)sibling
- Hiring contractors in Germanysibling
- [Employer of Record overview](/lp/employer-of-record)core
- The Graduation Modelcore
- [Teamed pricing, Zero FX Fixed](/pricing)commercial
- [Employer Cost Calculator](https://www.teamed.global/tools/employer-cost?country=IE)tool
- [Talk to an expert](https://www.teamed.global/contact)CTA

A note on this page.

This is a guide, not legal, tax or accounting advice. Ireland employment status and tax rules change and turn on the facts of each engagement. Verify current requirements with the Revenue Commissioners, the Department of Social Protection, and the Workplace Relations Commission, or speak to a qualified professional, before relying on any specific framework.
