His ins. will cover truck not you. he has to carry workman comp or occ ins for you. He should pay for this not you. Is he running his own authority or leased to a bigger company. He is required to have wc or occ for you.
1099 Job
Discussion in 'Trucker Taxes and Truck Financing' started by BoyWander, Jul 2, 2012.
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OK, here's the deal, on a 1099, you can count on about 28% going to the IRS.
15% self employment
and 13% for your social security tax
Also, you need to look at the insurance policy, some don't carry a lot of medical on their policies.
I know a driver that did this, and was injured on the job, but not in the truck, unloading the truck. NOTHING was covered, and it was all on him. He had a severe injury that got infected as well and laid him up. He had NO income, because he didn't have any reportable income to unemployment for the past 18 months, being a 1099.
THIS scenario is a very expensive gamble on your part. YOU need to look at the big picture. -
I added the information for Independent Contractor.
http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id=99921,00.html
http://www.irs.gov/businesses/small/article/0,,id=179115,00.html
bullhaulerswife Thanks this. -
Regarding accidents . Suppose you cause damage or injury . YOU are the responsible company .
bullhaulerswife Thanks this. -
This is also a good point. They can come after you for damages as well.
This scenario is NOT a win for the driver, ever! -
A contractor should have a contract to make it legal. That should be an interesting document.
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That's why gypo companies like to do the 1099 deal, no contracts, no paperwork, easy to hide.
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Not anymore with the IRS really cracking down and scrutinizing the 1099's.
If you really don't have any itemized deductions beyond the standard deduction, then you are going to be looked at. Especially in this industry, with fuel being a huge expense as it is.
Somewhere there is an article about this, I'll see if I can dig it up...... and I'm sure that Roadmedic will be along shortly to give his knowledge on the subject as well. -
No you are not unless a waiver has been signed, the truck insurance covers that and required by law to have insurance from the owner of the unit not the independent.
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Contracts are only good as the persons in the contract, or whoever has the better lawyer. If the contract is not legal then it is null and void.
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