For example - if you’ve been in place for a number of months, you might find yourself included in the holiday rota or you may find there is resistance if you want to substitute yourself, both factors that would count against you remaining genuinely outside IR35. Our advice is to manage your working practices carefully so the original working practices remain in place and you don’t, albeit unintentionally, fall foul of the rules.
Again, this simply isn’t true. Your IR35 status is determined by your contract and your working practices, so simply adding another client to your portfolio won’t automatically change your status. Indeed, you can be ‘inside’ IR35 for one client, and ‘outside’ for another, or both ‘inside’, or both ‘outside’.It’s certainly fair to say that if you serve several end clients simultaneously, or quickly move between assignments, then you’re more likely to work in a way that conforms to an ‘outside’ status assessment. This is because you are likely to be less embedded in each organisation and your arrangement is, therefore, less likely to morph into an appearance of employment.
Again, working practices are the thing you will be judged on, not the wording of your contract. The contract is important, of course, but it’s only part of the picture. The main consideration will be your actual working practices, whether you’re behaving like and being treated like a member of staff. Whatever your contract says, your working practices will hold more weight with a status determination expert or a tribunal.