Dental and Medical Counsel Blog

Independent Contractor or Employee? Protecting Physicians in Locums and Per-Diem Arrangements

Written by Ali Oromchian, Esq. | Jan 21, 2026 4:59:59 PM

At Dental & Medical Counsel, we regularly see physicians in locums tenens and per-diem arrangements who discover that their "independent contractor" classification doesn't match the legal reality of their working conditions. This misclassification creates serious financial and legal consequences, from unexpected tax bills to gaps in malpractice coverage. Many physician employment arrangements blur the line between independent contractor and employee status, creating risks that most doctors don't recognize until problems arise. What do you need to know?

Why Physician Misclassification Matters More Than Ever

Recent IRS and DOL enforcement efforts have specifically targeted the healthcare industry, with auditors scrutinizing locums and per-diem physician arrangements that claim independent contractor status while exercising employment-level control. The financial consequences of worker misclassification can be devastating, with physicians facing tax penalties ranging from thousands to tens of thousands of dollars, liability for back employment taxes, and loss of retirement benefits they should have received.

Misclassification directly affects your professional liability coverage by creating gaps in malpractice protection when facilities assume you carry your own insurance, but you've relied on employer-provided coverage. State-specific laws like California's AB5 and Massachusetts' independent contractor statute have created stricter classification standards that presume employment unless employers can prove otherwise through rigorous tests.

Understanding the Legal Tests for Worker Classification

The IRS Common Law Test examines three critical factors: behavioral control (who directs how work is performed), financial control (who controls business and financial aspects), and relationship type (contracts, benefits, permanency expectations). Under behavioral control analysis, courts ask whether facilities dictate when, where, and how you provide medical services, require attendance at staff meetings, or mandate use of specific protocols and electronic medical record systems.

Financial control assessment examines whether you have a genuine opportunity for profit or loss, significant investment in equipment and facilities, the ability to work for multiple clients simultaneously, or bear your own substantial business expenses. The Department of Labor's Economic Reality Test applies a six-factor analysis examining your economic dependence on the purported employer rather than focusing solely on contractual labels.

State-specific tests like California's ABC test create presumptions of employment unless hiring entities prove all three requirements: that workers are free from control, perform work outside the usual course of business, and are customarily engaged in an independently established trade. Our employment law compliance experts regularly see facilities that fail these tests despite labeling physicians as independent contractors.

The three-part legal framework courts use to determine classification:

  1. Behavioral Control Analysis: Does the facility dictate when, where, and how you provide medical services, require attendance at mandatory meetings, mandate use of specific protocols or EMR systems, or control your daily schedule without meaningful input
  2. Financial Control Assessment: Do you have genuine opportunity for profit beyond hourly compensation, significant personal investment in equipment or facilities, ability to work for multiple competing clients simultaneously, or bear substantial unreimbursed business expenses
  3. Relationship Evaluation: Is there a written independent contractor agreement, are you receiving any employee benefits (health insurance, retirement contributions, paid time off), is the arrangement permanent or project-based, and is your work integral to the facility's core medical services business

Common Misclassification Scenarios in Locums and Per-Diem Work

Hospital per-diem arrangements frequently misclassify physicians who work set schedules determined by the hospital, attend mandatory staff and quality improvement meetings, and must use hospital-mandated protocols and electronic medical record systems. These arrangements look like part-time employment despite independent contractor labels, particularly when physicians work regular shifts that integrate them into standard staffing patterns.

Locums tenens positions arranged through staffing agencies create three-party relationships where agencies claim independent contractor status but client facilities exercise day-to-day control over physician work. Courts examine who actually directs the physician's work rather than relying on contractual arrangements between agencies and facilities that physicians never negotiated.

Emergency department coverage contracts often require physicians to work specific shifts with no substitution rights while maintaining exclusive relationships that prohibit working for competing facilities. These restrictions on competition and schedule flexibility strongly suggest employment rather than true independent contractor status, particularly when combined with facility control over billing practices and patient relationships.

Telemedicine contractor positions through platform-based companies frequently involve company control over scheduling, pricing, patient assignment, and medical record systems while prohibiting physicians from developing independent patient relationships. Recent California employment law changes have intensified scrutiny of these arrangements under the ABC test's requirements.

Critical Contract Terms for Protecting Your Independent Contractor Status

Tax withholding and payment structure must clearly establish 1099 treatment with gross payment amounts that don't include any tax withholding, requiring you to make quarterly estimated tax payments directly to the IRS and state tax authorities. Payment should be structured per shift, per patient encounter, or per project rather than salary-based compensation that suggests employment.

Professional liability insurance provisions should explicitly require you to maintain your own occurrence or claims-made malpractice coverage with specified minimum limits, tail insurance responsibilities upon contract termination, and confirmation that facilities provide no coverage for your professional services. Who provides malpractice insurance serves as a critical classification factor, with employer-provided coverage strongly suggesting employment status.

Benefits and expense reimbursement terms must avoid creating employee indicators by ensuring you receive no health insurance, retirement plan contributions, paid time off, or other employee benefits. While you can negotiate higher compensation to offset these costs, accepting actual benefits undermines independent contractor status regardless of contractual labels.

Termination provisions should preserve at-will termination rights for both parties with reasonable notice requirements (typically 30-90 days) but without "for cause" termination standards or progressive discipline procedures typical of employment relationships. Independent contractors can be terminated for any reason or no reason, whereas employees receive various legal protections against wrongful termination.

Essential provisions every independent contractor agreement should include:

  • Clear IC relationship statement with explicit disclaimer of employment relationship, employee benefits, and employment law protections
  • Payment terms showing project or shift-based compensation without salary structure, performance bonuses, or employee-style incentive programs
  • Explicit tax responsibility allocation requiring the physician to pay all federal and state employment taxes on a quarterly estimated basis
  • Comprehensive malpractice provisions requiring physicians to maintaintheir  own professional liability coverage with specified limits and tail insurance obligations
  • Termination rights preserving at-will status for both parties without employment law protections, severance pay, or cause requirements
  • Non-exclusive service language explicitly permitting simultaneous work for multiple facilities, including direct competitors
  • Substitution rights allowing qualified physicians to cover accepted shifts, subject only to reasonable credentialing requirements
  • Business expense allocation clearly stating physician's responsibility for licensing fees, DEA registration, CME expenses, and professional membership dues

Equipment and facility use provisions should clarify whether you provide your own tools (laptop computer, medical instruments, diagnostic equipment) or use facility resources exclusively, as independent contractors typically supply their own tools while employees use employer equipment. Multiple client relationship terms should explicitly preserve your ability to work for competing facilities, maintain your own patient relationships, and pursue other professional opportunities without facility approval or non-compete restrictions.

Our healthcare contract review services help physicians negotiate these critical terms before signing agreements that may create classification problems and financial liability down the road.

Protect Your Professional and Financial Future with Expert Legal Guidance

The cost of misclassification far exceeds the modest investment in professional contract review and negotiation assistance. At Dental & Medical Counsel, we've helped dozens of physicians correct independent contractor arrangements before IRS audits, tax penalties, or malpractice coverage gaps created serious financial consequences. Our track record includes successful renegotiations that preserved physician autonomy while ensuring proper tax treatment and liability protection.

Whether you're considering locums tenens positions, per-diem hospital work, or other independent contractor arrangements, our team provides the expertise and advocacy needed to protect your interests. We review existing agreements to identify classification risks and negotiate improved terms that provide genuine independent contractor status with appropriate tax treatment, malpractice coverage, and professional flexibility. Contact our experienced healthcare attorneys today for a confidential consultation about your independent contractor agreements and classification concerns.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What does physician misclassification mean?
Physician misclassification occurs when a doctor is labeled as an independent contractor but is treated like an employee under the law. This happens when hospitals, staffing agencies, or platforms exert control over scheduling, protocols, compensation, or work conditions that are inconsistent with true independent contractor status.

Q: Why are locums tenens and per-diem physicians at higher risk of misclassification?
Locums and per-diem physicians often work regular schedules, follow facility protocols, use employer systems, and integrate into standard staffing models. These factors make it easier for regulators to argue the arrangement functions like employment, even if the contract says “independent contractor.”

Q: What are the financial consequences of misclassification for physicians?
Misclassification can result in unexpected tax bills, penalties, interest, and liability for back employment taxes. Physicians may also lose access to retirement benefits, unemployment protections, and workers’ compensation coverage they should have received as employees.

Q: How does misclassification affect malpractice coverage?
Misclassification can create gaps in malpractice coverage when facilities assume the physician carries their own insurance, but the physician relied on employer-provided coverage. Disputes over coverage often arise after a claim is filed, when it is too late to fix the issue.

Q: How do courts determine whether a physician is an employee or independent contractor?
Courts apply federal and state legal tests that focus on control, financial independence, and the nature of the working relationship. Labels in a contract matter far less than how the relationship actually operates in practice.

Q: What is the IRS Common Law Test for independent contractors?
The IRS evaluates behavioral control, financial control, and the overall relationship between the parties. If a facility controls how, when, and where you work, limits your financial independence, or treats the relationship as permanent, classification as an employee is more likely.

Q: How do state laws like California’s AB5 affect physicians?
States like California apply stricter standards that presume employment unless all requirements are met. Under the ABC test, physicians must be free from control, perform work outside the hiring entity’s usual business, and operate an independently established medical practice, which many healthcare arrangements fail to satisfy.

Q: Can a contract alone protect my independent contractor status?
No. While a well drafted contract is important, courts and regulators look beyond written language to the actual working conditions. Even a strong independent contractor agreement cannot overcome day to day control that resembles employment.

Q: What contract terms help support true independent contractor status?
Key terms include non exclusive work rights, substitution rights, independent malpractice coverage, project or shift based compensation, lack of employee benefits, and responsibility for taxes and professional expenses. These terms must also reflect reality in practice.

Q: When should I have an attorney review my locums or per-diem agreement?
Ideally before signing. Many physicians seek legal help only after tax problems or coverage disputes arise. Early review allows risks to be identified and corrected before they result in audits, penalties, or professional exposure.

Q: What should I do if I believe I am misclassified?
You should have your agreement and working conditions reviewed by a healthcare attorney. In many cases, contracts can be renegotiated to correct classification issues before regulators or insurers become involved.

About the Author

At Dental & Medical Counsel, PC, we understand navigating the legal process can be tricky. We believe every dentist, optometrist, and doctor deserves the best advice and service, so they can focus on what they do best: treating their patients. We make their lives easier by providing expert guidance, so they can focus on their personal and professional aspirations. We are healthcare attorneys.

About Ali Oromchian, Esq.

Your Dental, Optometry, Healthcare Lawyer

Ali Oromchian, JD, LL.M., is the founding attorney of the Dental & Medical Counsel, PC law firm, and is renowned for his expertise in legal matters

In addition to being a healthcare lawyer for almost 20 years, Ali is also a renowned speaker throughout North America, on topics such as practice transitions, employment law, negotiation strategies, estate planning, and more! Ali has helped thousands of doctors realize their professional goals and looks forward to aiding you in navigating the legal landscape.