On February 27, 2026, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division issued a Proposed Rule that may once again change how independent contractor status is determined under the Fair Labor Standards Act.
If finalized, this would be the third major shift in less than a decade.
The current standard took effect in 2024. Now the DOL is considering a return to the 2021 framework, with modifications.
The proposed return emphasizes two core factors:
The DOL’s stated reason is predictability. It argues that the 2024 “totality-of-the-circumstances” approach, where no factor carried predetermined weight, created uncertainty and discouraged legitimate independent contractor relationships. The agency believes a return to the 2021 “core factors” framework may reduce compliance costs and slightly increase independent contracting.
That is the policy argument.
The litigation reality is different.
If finalized, this would be the third major shift in less than a decade.
The current standard took effect in 2024. Now the DOL is considering a return to the 2021 framework, with modifications.
The proposed return emphasizes two core factors:
- The degree of control the worker actually exercises over the work; and
- Whether the worker has a genuine opportunity for profit or loss.
The DOL’s stated reason is predictability. It argues that the 2024 “totality-of-the-circumstances” approach, where no factor carried predetermined weight, created uncertainty and discouraged legitimate independent contractor relationships. The agency believes a return to the 2021 “core factors” framework may reduce compliance costs and slightly increase independent contracting.
That is the policy argument.
The litigation reality is different.
This Is an Enterprise Risk Issue, Not a Technical HR Update
Independent contractor classification is no longer a drafting exercise. It is a balance sheet issue.If misclassification is alleged, exposure can include:
- Unpaid wages and overtime
- Liquidated damages
- Attorneys’ fees
- Class or collective actions
- Parallel state claims under NY Labor Law
- Freelance Isn’t Free Act liability
- Retaliation claims
- Potential personal liability for owners and executives
Each swing in federal policy invites a new wave of audits, private litigation, and opportunistic claims.
Classification Risk Is Built Into How Your Business Operates
At Lieb at Law, P.C., we evaluate classification risk the way a litigator would, not the way a form agreement does.We look at:
- Compensation and commission structures
- Control mechanisms in practice, not just on paper
- Use of technology for supervision or tracking
- Non-competes and restrictive covenants
- Termination authority
- Integration into core business functions
- How the model will appear to a jury
If your agreements say “independent contractor” but your workflows say “employee,” the contract will not save you.
Why Acting Now Matters
Public comment on the Proposed Rule is open through April 28, 2026. The final rule may look different. It may shift again in the next administration.Waiting for regulatory stability is not a strategy.
The prudent move is to stress-test your model under both frameworks and determine:
- Where exposure exists today
- How a plaintiff’s lawyer would frame the case
- Whether your documentation aligns with actual practice
- Whether structural adjustments can reduce risk without breaking the business model
Independent Contractor Risk Audit
If your company engages independent contractors, now is the time to:
- Audit agreements and compensation structures
- Evaluate control and supervision practices
- Assess exposure under federal and state law
- Review notice, deduction, and payment compliance
- Align operational reality with legal positioning
Regulatory instability is not a defense to misclassification. It is a reason to prepare.
To schedule a confidential strategy session, contact Lieb at Law, P.C.
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