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My Employer Misclassified Me as a Contractor in Canada

Updated

If your employer has been treating you as an independent contractor but the reality looks a lot like regular employment, you may have been misclassified. This is one of the most common labour violations in Canada, and the consequences can mean you are owed years of entitlements.

The short answer

The label “contractor” in a contract does not determine your actual employment status — the working relationship does. If you were controlled by your employer, worked exclusively for them, and used their tools, you were likely an employee and may be owed back entitlements.

The test for employment vs. contractor in Canada

Courts and the CRA look at four key factors. No single factor is decisive — it is the overall picture that matters.

Factor Points Toward Employee Points Toward Contractor
Control Employer sets hours, tasks, procedures Worker decides how and when to work
Tools & equipment Employer provides tools Worker uses their own tools
Chance of profit / risk of loss Fixed wage, no financial risk Can profit more or lose money
Integration Core part of the business Works for multiple clients, peripheral work

Other relevant questions:

  • Did you work exclusively for one company?
  • Did you have a company email or badge?
  • Did they include you in team meetings, training, and company events?
  • Could they terminate you at any time without cause?

If most of these point to employment, you were likely misclassified.

What entitlements you may have been denied

If you were an employee being paid as a contractor, your employer likely failed to provide:

Entitlement What Was Missed
CPP contributions Employer’s 50% share of CPP premiums
EI premiums Employer’s 1.4x share of EI premiums
Vacation pay 4–6% of gross wages
Overtime pay Any hours over 8 per day or 40 per week
Termination notice 1–8+ weeks depending on service
Stat holiday pay Pay for statutory holidays not worked
Benefits If other employees received drug/dental

How to get a ruling from the CRA

You can file a CPP/EI ruling request (Form CPT1) with the CRA, asking them to determine your employment status. The CRA will examine the working relationship and issue a formal ruling.

  • Who can file: The worker or the employer
  • Form: CPT1 — Request for a Ruling as to the Status of a Worker
  • Timeline: The CRA typically responds within 3–6 months
  • Cost: Free
  • Effect: If the CRA rules you were an employee, they can reassess CPP and EI for the previous years

Filing an employment standards complaint

Separately from the CRA process, you can file a complaint with your provincial employment standards office for vacation pay, overtime, and termination pay violations. These processes can run in parallel.

What to do if you were recently let go

If you were terminated without notice or severance and you believe you were actually an employee, you have a strong wrongful dismissal claim. Employees are owed termination notice under employment standards legislation — contractors generally are not. This is often the most financially significant part of a misclassification case.

Consult an employment lawyer. Most offer free initial consultations, and many take employment cases on contingency.

Your tax situation

If you were paid as a contractor, you may have been filing as self-employed and paying both halves of CPP yourself. After a CRA ruling or legal settlement, your tax returns may need to be amended:

  • You may be owed a refund for the excess tax paid
  • Your employer will owe their share of CPP and EI back to the CRA

Key takeaway

Contracts do not override the legal reality of your working relationship. If you were controlled, integrated, and fully dependent on one employer, you were likely an employee. File a CRA ruling request and consider a provincial employment standards complaint to recover what you are owed.