20 April 2026
EU Labor Law Basics for Independent Contractors
Understanding EU labor law as an independent contractor protects you from misclassification risks, ensures proper contracts, and helps you work legally across borders.
The most critical legal question for EU contractors is worker classification. True self-employment indicators: multiple clients, control over how/when work is done, own equipment, ability to subcontract, and bearing financial risk. Always use written contracts defining scope, deliverables, timeline, payment terms, IP ownership, and termination conditions. Cross-border work can trigger social security obligations in other EU member states under Regulation 883/2004. VAT reverse-charge typically applies when billing business clients across EU borders. If processing personal data, a Data Processing Agreement is legally required under GDPR. Track all contract work and time to maintain clear records.
Related Posts
Year-Round Tax Planning: A Monthly Checklist for EU Freelancers
Don't wait until year-end to think about taxes. This monthly checklist keeps your tax obligations manageable and stress-free.
AI Tools for Freelancers: Practical Applications Without the Hype
Cut through the AI noise. Here are the genuinely useful AI applications for freelancers in 2026, with realistic expectations.
Networking for Introverts: Building Professional Relationships Quietly
You don't need to work the room to build a powerful network. Here are networking strategies that play to introverted strengths.
Share this article