And don't forget if you have more than (3) employees in the state of GA you have to have Workers Comp insurance. If you didn't know. Good Luck!
I would recommend no employees to start. Make them all 1099 contractors - less liability and $$$$. JMHO
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And don't forget if you have more than (3) employees in the state of GA you have to have Workers Comp insurance. If you didn't know. Good Luck!
Did you get a business license? Knew a guy that ran a business for a year before he got one. He had a LLC too.Don't forget your business license(s) and general liability insurance.
I would recommend no employees to start. Make them all 1099 contractors - less liability and $$$$. JMHO
Depends on what you do. The more I focus on doing one thing, the more successful I have become. Those first few years burned me out because diversification lead to me working my ass off all the time. Once I streamlined my operation to do more of what we specialize in, I work half as much and make twice the money.I have worked for myself since 1991 being diversified with the services provided that has been the key to my success . Don't do just one thing and don't work for just one or two people .
That's a great way to get hammered by the tax man when one of your "subs" gets pissed and reports you. I've talked to a few old timers that did this and lost big time when they layed someone off and the "sub" went to file unemployment.
Just cause you call them a sub doesn't make it true....
Depends on what you do. The more I focus on doing one thing, the more successful I have become. Those first few years burned me out because diversification lead to me working my ass off all the time. Once I streamlined my operation to do more of what we specialize in, I work half as much and make twice the money.
This^^ Lots of employers 1099 employees and it’s fine, because they haven’t been caught yet. Piss off a 1099 employee or get audited and you could have some serious problems on your hands.This can work very well, as long as they are a legitimate subcontractor. Otherwise the IRS will disagree with you, and make you pay all kinds of back Social Security taxes and such on them, plus penalties. As well as a bunch of other penalties that are too complicated to discuss here.
It comes down to control. If they control themselves, when they want to work, what kind of jobs they do, their own equipment, have their own insurance... they can be a 1099s.
If you control them, i.e. they wear your shirt and you tell them what time to come to work, what jobs to do, the IRS calls them a W-2.