1099 vs W-2 workers comp rules in New Jersey
New Jersey uses a strict 'ABC test' to determine if a worker is an independent contractor or an employee. Coverage threshold: All employers with one or more employees must provide workers' compensation insurance. Verified 2026-05-09.
What counts as a 1099 vs W-2 in New Jersey?
New Jersey uses a strict 'ABC test' to determine if a worker is an independent contractor or an employee.
The practical test most carriers and New Jersey regulators apply is the right-to-control test: who decides when, where, and how the work gets done. Workers who set their own hours, supply their own tools, work for multiple clients, and absorb their own profit-or-loss risk look like 1099 contractors. Workers who clock in, use your equipment, take direction on methods, and depend on a single client for income look like W-2 employees, regardless of what the contract says.
Why this matters for your premium
Workers comp premium is rated on payroll. If you pay a worker as a 1099 but the New Jersey workers comp bureau or your carrier later reclassifies them, the premium is recalculated retroactively, often back to the start of the policy. Most carriers also charge 50 to 100 percent of the missing premium as a penalty plus interest. New Jersey adds: Penalties for non-compliance include fines up to $5,000 for the first 10 days and $5,000 for each additional 10-day period, stop-work orders, and potential criminal charges.
How to defend a 1099 classification at audit
Keep three things on file for every 1099 you pay: a written independent contractor agreement that documents independent control, a certificate of insurance from the contractor's own workers comp policy (or a state-issued exclusion form), and proof the worker advertises services to other clients. Auditors in New Jersey typically look at how many other clients the contractor served during the policy period, whether the contractor invoiced against a structured rate, and whether the contractor absorbed expenses such as fuel, materials, or insurance.
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FAQs
Are 1099 contractors covered by workers comp in New Jersey?
New Jersey uses a strict 'ABC test' to determine if a worker is an independent contractor or an employee.
Who has to carry workers comp in New Jersey?
All employers with one or more employees must provide workers' compensation insurance.
What is the penalty for misclassifying employees as 1099 in New Jersey?
Penalties for non-compliance include fines up to $5,000 for the first 10 days and $5,000 for each additional 10-day period, stop-work orders, and potential criminal charges. Misclassification adds the back premium owed plus interest, often retroactive to the start of the misclassified worker's tenure.
Am I liable for my subcontractors workers comp in New Jersey?
General contractors are liable for the workers' compensation benefits of employees of an uninsured subcontractor.
What happens at audit if a 1099 looks like a W-2 in New Jersey?
If your carrier audits payroll and finds a 1099 worker who acted like an employee (set hours, used your tools, took direction on the work), the auditor can reclassify them as a W-2 retroactively. Premium is recalculated as if the worker were on payroll the entire policy period, plus interest. Keep certificates of insurance for every 1099 you pay, and have written contracts that document independent control over hours, tools, and methods.