VIII. Employees and self-employed persons

According to section 4(1) of the Employment Ordinance ( Cap. 57 ), it applies in general only to employer-employee relationship that is  governed by a contract of employment. Employees enjoy rights, privilege and obligations that are not found with self-employed persons or independent contractor. An employee is an individual who is engaged under a contract of employment.

The Employment Ordinance applies to employers and their employees who are engaged under contracts of employment (Note), and only those employees are entitled to the rights and benefits that are provided under the Employment Ordinance . To avoid unnecessary disputes, it is important to delineate between the status of an employee and a contractor (or self-employed person) when both parties enter into a service contract.

(Note: The Employment Ordinance applies to every employee who is engaged under a contract of employment, with the following exceptions:

  1. persons who are family members of the business proprietor by whom they are employed, and also live in the same dwelling as that proprietor;
  2. employees as defined in the Contracts for Employment Outside Hong Kong Ordinance ;
  3. persons who are serving under crew agreements within the meaning of the Merchant Shipping (Seafarers) Ordinance , or on board a ship that is not registered in Hong Kong;
  4. contracts of apprenticeship registered under the Apprenticeship Ordinance except to the extent provided in that Ordinance.)

There is no one single conclusive test to distinguish a contract of employment from a contract for service. Some factors to be considered in identifying a contract of employment are as follows:

A. Control

  • Who decides on the matters of recruitment and dismissal of workers?
  • Who pays for the workers’ wages and in what ways?
  • Who determines the production process, timing and method of production?

B. Ownership and provision of factors of production

  • Who provides the tools and equipment?
  • Who provides the work place and materials?

C. Economic considerations

  • Do the workers carry on business on their own account or carry on the business for their employers?
  • Are the workers involved in any prospect of profit, or are they liable for any risk of loss?
  • How are the worker’s earnings calculated and profits derived?

The relevant factors to be considered are determined by the circumstances of each case. For example, workers who bring their own tools and materials for their work are more likely to work under contracts for service by independent contractors. In contrast, those who are fully provided with tools and materials by their bosses are more likely to work under contracts of employment.

In delineating an individual case, all relevant factors should be carefully weighted and an evaluation and analysis of the factual circumstances in which the work is performed should be carried out. You can also refer to the Labour Department’s webpage for more information.

For further reference, the Inland Revenue Department has a set of criteria for determining whether a service contract is a contract of employment. The major criteria are highlighted as follows:

  • there is no employment-type benefit (e.g. money, annual leave, sick leave or pension) provided for the service carried out;
  • the service is not required to be carried out personally (e.g. can hire assistants/sub-contactors);
  • the performance of the service is not subject to the control or supervision that may be commonly exercised by an employer in relation to the performance of an employee’s duties;
  • the remuneration is not paid or credited periodically (e.g. weekly or monthly) as is common with employment contracts;
  • neither the service provider nor the receiver has the right to terminate the service contract before the expiry of the contract or before the job finished, by giving prior termination notice/money in lieu of notice to the other party; and
  • neither party in the service contract has intended to lead members of the public to believe that an employment relationship exists.

If all of these criteria have been satisfied, then a contract of employment is unlikely to exist. For more details on the criteria, please see the Inland Revenue Department’s webpage .

In cases of dispute about whether or not the subject contract is a contract of employment, the jurisdiction or judgment rests with the Court. A local case was finally heard before the UK’s Judicial Committee of Privy Council in 1997 (the final appellant court for Hong Kong before 1 July 1997). The Appellant, a golf club caddie, did not have a written employment contract, and there was also no guarantee by the club that he would get any work from the players at the club. However, there was an agreed payment rate per round and he was also required to wear a uniform provided by the club. The Privy Council ruled that he was an independent contractor/self-employed person rather than an employee because there was no mutual employment obligation between the club and the Appellant.

However, the Privy Council reiterated that whether or not a contract of employment existed has to be determined by investigation and evaluation of all the factual circumstances in which the work is performed. In other words, no exhaustive list of factors or strict rules governs the relative weight of each factor when making the decision.