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Netherlands (NL)

Spain (ES)

United Kingdom (EN)

A guide to paying U.S. & international contractors

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If employers want the most robust bench of on-call talent, they must do everything they can to make life easy for their contractors.

Contractors are our competitive edge as a marketing team. I do everything I can to make their choice to work for us a ‘no-brainer.’

How to pay independent contractors in 4 steps

Step 1: Choose your payroll software 

The era of manual payments by direct wire transfer or cutting a business check is over. Instead, look for that unites all your bookkeeping and regulatory requirements with the ability to manage ancillary data like devices and app permissions. 

While not every contractor may require a loaned computer or access to internal communication platforms, these functions are much easier to have and not use than integrate after the fact—make your purchasing decision based on equal parts capability and flexibility. 

Step 2: Get your W-9 forms

The IRS requires an independent contractor to provide a ; the form includes the contractor’s contact information and taxpayer identification number. Contractors must provide a W-9 before performing work. Most payroll systems can request these forms. 

Step 3: Get your contractors set up in your payroll system

This is the easy part. Once you have a contractor’s W-9 form, you should have what you need to create a user in your payroll system. Most systems like Rippling will have the ability to add the contractor’s rate and contract details and offer them a time-tracking platform. At this point, you should also set up user permissions for internal applications like Slack, Outlook, Zendesk, or whatever else your teams rely on to collaborate. 

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How Rippling can help with paying contractors

Rippling unites all facets of contractor management, giving you the ability to oversee your entire workforce in one place.

Step 4: Prepare and send 1099-NEC forms

Beginning with the 2020 tax year, businesses that hire independent contractors must send those contractors a 1099-NEC form at the end of the year. Contractors must receive the form by January 31 at the latest. 

According to the IRS, recipients of the form should meet the following four conditions:

  • The payment is made to someone who is not your employee

  • The payment is made for services in the course of your trade or business

  • The payment is made to an individual, partnership, estate, or corporation

  • The payment total is at least $600 for the year

Rippling automatically generates and distributes 1099 tax forms to your contractors. And all past 1099 forms are stored within your Rippling account. 

Rippling houses your contractor data alongside your full-time employees' HR and IT data. Since your entire workforce is in a single platform, taxes and other reporting are one-click simple. Such integration also means that contractors get paid whenever you run payroll (for the contractors out there—you never have to wait on payments with clients that use Rippling.) Get the details after the jump. 

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Disclaimer

Rippling and its affiliates do not provide tax, accounting, or legal advice. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide or be relied on for tax, accounting, or legal advice. You should consult your own tax, accounting, and legal advisors before engaging in any related activities or transactions.

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Author

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Vanessa Kahkesh

Content Marketing Manager, HR

Vanessa Kahkesh is a content marketer for HR passionate about shaping conversations at the intersection of people, strategy, and workplace culture. At Rippling, she leads the creation of HR-focused content. Vanessa honed her marketing, storytelling, and growth skills through roles in product marketing, community-building, and startup ventures. She worked on the product marketing team at Replit and was the founder of STUDENTpreneurs, a global community platform for student founders. Her multidisciplinary experience — combining narrative, brand, and operations — gives her a unique lens into HR content: she effectively bridges the technical side of HR with the human stories behind them.

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