Freelancer or Employee? Getting the Classification Right in Malaysia
How Malaysian courts determine worker classification and how to structure freelancer engagements correctly to avoid EPF and SOCSO liability.
How Malaysian courts determine worker classification and how to structure freelancer engagements correctly to avoid EPF and SOCSO liability.
Misclassifying a worker as an independent contractor when they are legally an employee is one of the most expensive mistakes a Malaysian business owner can make. The consequences include backdated EPF, SOCSO, and EIS contributions, plus interest and penalties from both LHDN and PERKESO.
Malaysian courts apply a multi-factor test to determine worker classification, with the primary question being: does the business control not just what the worker does, but how they do it? The more control, the more likely an employment relationship exists.
If your engagement looks more like employment than contracting — even if both parties prefer the contractor label — you should seek legal advice on restructuring. A contract that calls someone a "consultant" but describes an employment relationship will not protect you if challenged. Lawgistics has a Freelance Services Agreement template reviewed for Malaysian law compliance.
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