The New Jersey Department of Labor and Workforce Development adopted final rules clarifying the state’s ABC test for worker classification. The regulations take effect October 1, 2026, and spell out exactly how New Jersey decides whether a worker is an independent contractor or an employee.
For self-employed workers and the businesses that hire them, this standard carries real weight. It governs who qualifies as a contractor under state wage-and-hour and unemployment laws. The burden of proof falls on the hiring business.
What The ABC Test Actually Requires
A business must satisfy all three prongs to classify a worker as an independent contractor.
Prong A demands that the worker operate free from the hiring business’s control, both under the contract and in actual practice.
Prong B requires that the work fall outside the hiring company’s usual business activities or take place away from all of its locations.
Prong C requires the worker to run an independently established trade, occupation, or business on an ongoing basis.
The new rules also clarify one thing contractors should note: a written contract labeling someone an independent contractor does not settle the question on its own. New Jersey gives that language less weight when the hiring business drafted the agreement, and the key terms were non-negotiable.
Why This Matters For Self-Employed Workers
New Jersey’s ABC test ranks among the strictest classification standards in the country. Prong B trips up the most people. A freelancer whose work closely resembles a client’s core business activity risks being classified as an employee, even when both parties prefer a contractor relationship.
The consequences cut both ways. Reclassification opens the door to unemployment insurance and wage protections. On the other hand, stricter rules can make New Jersey businesses reluctant to hire independent contractors at all.
What Self-Employed Workers Should Do Next
Review your client relationships against all three prongs before October 1. Pay close attention to Prong B. If your services are at the center of a client’s core business, start documenting how you operate independently while serving multiple customers.
Focus on building concrete markers of a real independent business: your own tools, multiple active clients, separate marketing, and a registered business entity. New Jersey will weigh those facts far more heavily than contract language alone.
What To Watch Next
Business groups have pushed back on the rule, so expect guidance and possible legal challenges before October 1. New Jersey’s move also connects to broader federal activity on classification, including the SBA roundtable on the DOL joint-employer rule.
Self-employed workers outside New Jersey should pay attention too. The state frequently sets the national template for stricter labor regulation. Similar ABC standards could spread to other states if these rules survive legal scrutiny.
Photo by Ryan Loughlin: Unsplash