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The difference between hiring contractors vs employees in Ukraine

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Key takeaways

  • Ukraine’s labor laws grant employees statutory rights, benefits, and termination protections not available to contractors.
  • Worker classification depends on factors like control, work integration, and economic dependence, not just contract titles.
  • Misclassification can lead to fines, back payments, and legal disputes under Ukrainian labor and tax laws.
  • Clear contracts and compliance checks help employers engage talent legally and efficiently.

Ukraine’s workforce landscape has shifted significantly in recent years, especially with the rise of remote and flexible work arrangements both domestically and internationally. Businesses hiring in Ukraine must understand the critical legal distinctions between employees and independent contractors to avoid compliance pitfalls.

According to Ukrinform, as of 2023, almost 315,000 individuals were registered as individual entrepreneurs (private entrepreneurs, or ФОП) in Ukraine, with many working in IT, design, and consultancy. These are functionally independent contractors. However, misclassifying a worker can lead to back taxes, social security arrears, and fines, and potentially reclassification by labor inspectors.

This guide explains the legal difference between an employee and a contractor in Ukraine, covers classification tests, tax rules, and payment obligations, and shows how Multiplier’s Contractor of Record (COR) – also known as Agent of Record (AOR) can help you stay fully compliant when scaling your workforce.

Worker classification in Ukraine

To avoid misclassification, you need to understand how employees and contractors are defined under Ukrainian laws.

  • Governed by the Labor Code of Ukraine
  • Works under the employer’s direction, control, and internal policies
  • Entitled to statutory rights such as paid annual leave, sick leave, minimum wage protection, and social insurance contributions
  • Employment contract is usually indefinite (unless otherwise agreed), with regular remuneration
  • Governed by the Civil Code of Ukraine (civil law contracts, e.g., service or consultancy agreements)
  • Independent in managing work methods, timelines, and client base
  • No entitlement to statutory employment benefits like leave, severance, or social contributions (unless voluntarily registered)
  • Paid per service or project deliverables, not through regular wages

Starting with the basics, let’s look at the differences between employees and contractors below:

Legal Aspect

Employee

Contractor

Governing law

Labor Code of Ukraine, Law on Labor Remuneration, Law on Compulsory State Social Insurance

Civil Code of Ukraine, Commercial Code, Contract terms

Control and supervision

High — employer directs work schedule, location, and methods

Low — contractor determines how and when work is performed

Tax deduction

Employer withholds Personal Income Tax (18%), Military Tax (1.5%), and Unified Social Contribution (USC 22% employer-paid)

Contractor pays own taxes (typically under FOP simplified tax regime — 5% or 3% + VAT)

Entitlements

Paid annual leave, sick leave, parental leave, and severance protections

None is mandated by law; only what is in the contract

Termination protection

Notice periods and protections under labor law

Governed solely by contract terms

Contract type

Employment agreement

Service agreement (civil law contract)

Worker classification test in Ukraine

Ukrainian labor inspectors and courts look beyond contract titles to determine the true nature of the relationship. They rely on factual indicators rather than on how the contract is labeled.

Courts in Ukraine typically evaluate classification based on several factors:

1. Control

Question: Does the employer dictate the worker’s schedule, process, and reporting?
Interpretation:

  • Strong employer control → Likely an employee
  • Independence in managing work → Likely a contractor

2. Workplace

Question: Is the work primarily performed at the employer’s premises?
Interpretation:

  • Work tied to the employer’s location → Likely an employee
  • Work done remotely/anywhere → Likely a contractor

3. Resources

Question: Who provides the tools, equipment, and materials for the work?
Interpretation:

  • Employer provides resources → Likely an employee
  • Worker uses own resources → Likely a contractor

4. Payment

Question: How is the worker compensated?
Interpretation:

  • Fixed, regular salary → Likely an employee
  • Project-based or irregular payments → Likely a contractor

5. Business integration

Question: Is the worker’s role essential to the company’s core business?
Interpretation:

  • Work integral to operations → Likely an employee
  • Work supplementary or external → Likely a contractor

6. Economic dependence

Question: Does the worker rely financially on one client for income?
Interpretation:

  • Dependent on single employer → Likely an employee
  • Multiple clients, diversified income → Likely a contractor

7. Subordination

Question: Is the worker subject to internal policies and supervision like other employees?
Interpretation:

  • Bound by company policies and management hierarchy → Likely an employee
  • Operates independently, outside company rules → Likely a contractor

Worker classification checklist for Ukraine

You can use this quick checklist to help figure out whether your new hire should be classified as an employee or a contractor in Ukraine.

Question

If “Yes” → Likely an employee

Do you control how, when, or where the worker performs tasks?

Yes

Do you provide the tools or workspace?

Yes

Is the work essential to your core business?

Yes

Is the relationship ongoing and indefinite?

Yes

Is the worker financially dependent on your payments?

Yes

Do you restrict them from working with others?

Yes

✔️ If you answered “yes” to most of these, the person is likely an employee, not a contractor.

Next, let’s see how employees and contractors are paid in Ukraine and what their compensation structure looks like.

Employee vs contractor pay in Ukraine

Below we have mentioned how each amount component would be treated for employees and contractors in Ukraine assuming that the monthly payout is $2,000:

Component

Employee

Contractor

Gross pay

$2,000

$2,000

Employer USC (22%)

$440

Employee PIT (18%) + Military Tax (1.5%)

$390

Contractor taxes

~5% ($100) under FOP regime

Net payout

~$1,570

~$1,900

Total employer cost

$2,440

$2,000

Note: Figures vary depending on exchange rate, local tax policy, and whether the contractor operates under a simplified tax system.

How Multiplier can help

Use our free employee cost calculator to estimate the total cost of hiring in Ukraine, including salary, PF, ESI, and tax deductions.

But, there’s more. Employees and contractors can also be distinguished basis the benefits and protections they have. Let’s see the same in the next section.

 

Employees vs contractors in Ukraine: Benefits and protections

According to Ukrainian labor law, employees are entitled to statutory benefits and social protections, with employers responsible for ensuring compliance. Contractors, however, are not covered by these benefits unless specifically agreed in the contract, and they handle their own tax and social obligations.

Benefit/Protection

Employee

Contractor

Paid annual leave (24 days)

Sick leave (paid via Social Insurance Fund)

Maternity/paternity leave

Severance pay

Social insurance coverage

❌ (Self-responsibility)

Unemployment benefits

Next, let’s understand on basis of common business situations as to who should be hired when between employee and a contractor.

When to hire a contractor vs an employee in Ukraine

Look at the table below to understand hiring whom out of the two would make more business sense.

Situation

Recommended hire

Long-term, full-time developer role

Employee

Short-term marketing project

Contractor

Need full control over schedule and output

Employee

Require quick onboarding and flexibility

Contractor

But, what if you made a mistake? In the next section, we look at the consequences of misclassifying an employee in Ukraine.

Misclassifying an employee as a contractor can lead to:

  • Back payment of taxes and social contributions (USC, PIT, Military Tax) for the entire period of misclassification
  • Penalties under the Labor Code up to 10 times the minimum wage per misclassified worker
  • Liability for unpaid leave, sick pay, and severance
  • Court-ordered reclassification of the relationship

Civil contract reclassified: Ukraine Supreme Court grants UAH 2,000 to employee

The Supreme Court of Ukraine (Cassation Civil Court) ruled in May 2022 that a call-center operator hired under a civil/service contract with the DTEK group was, in fact, an employee. The court noted key signs of employment — fixed shifts, workplace access, subordination to a manager, and salary-like payments.

Consequences:

  • Recognition of an employment relationship for the period Feb 22–Mar 27, 2019
  • Mandatory entry in the worker’s official labor book for this period
  • Award of UAH 2,000 in moral damages
  • Broader claims (e.g., average earnings, unused leave) denied due to short tenure

How Multiplier helps you hire compliantly in Ukraine

Staying compliant when hiring employees and contractors in Ukraine requires careful worker classification. Businesses should:

  • Draft clear and role-appropriate contracts
  • Avoid excessive control over contractors
  • Structure payments and deliverables to match project-based work
  • Classify workers based on actual work conditions, not just the contract title
  • Conduct periodic compliance audits

While these steps help minimize risks, managing compliance on your own can be complex. This is where Multiplier’s Employer of Record (EOR) and COR services make the process seamless.

Multiplier ensures full compliance with Ukrainian labor and tax laws by:

  • Providing locally compliant employment contracts aligned with the Ukrainian Labor Code
  • Automating calculation and remittance of PIT, Military Tax, and USC
  • Offering contractor agreements tailored to Ukrainian Civil Law
  • Enabling fast onboarding with complete compliance for both employees and contractors
  • Leveraging local legal experts to review classification risks and contract structures
  • Allowing companies to hire in 150+ countries from a single platform

By combining compliance best practices with EOR expertise, Multiplier helps you confidently expand and manage your workforce in Ukraine without the risk of misclassification or penalties.

Book a demo today to see how Multiplier can simplify compliant hiring in Ukraine.

FAQs

What’s the USC rate in Ukraine?

22% of gross salary, paid by the employer.

Can contractors use the simplified tax system?

Yes, many register as FOP and pay 5% (or 3% + VAT) on revenue.

Are contractors entitled to paid leave?

No, only employees get statutory leave.

What’s the penalty for misclassification?

Up to 10× the minimum wage per worker, plus back taxes.

Can I pay contractors in foreign currency?

Yes, but contracts must specify the payment currency and comply with Ukrainian currency regulations.

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