The U.S. Small Business Administration’s Office of Advocacy will host a virtual labor roundtable on Thursday, May 28, 2026, from 2 to 4 p.m. ET to gather small business feedback on the U.S. Department of Labor’s 2026 proposed rule on the definition of joint employer. Advocacy posted the May 20 invitation as the public comment window on the DOL proposal stays open through June 22.
For sole proprietors, contractors, and microbusiness owners who share workers with staffing firms, franchisors, or vendors, the joint employer standard decides who is on the hook for minimum wage, overtime, family and medical leave, and migrant worker pay. A federal definition that swings either way could reshape contract terms, insurance premiums, and how many clients want to keep an independent contractor relationship at all.
What The DOL Proposed Rule Actually Does
The DOL published the joint employer proposal on April 23, 2026 in the Federal Register, covering the Fair Labor Standards Act, the Family and Medical Leave Act, and the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act. It creates a single federal test for when two or more businesses are treated as joint employers of the same worker.
The proposal narrows joint employer liability to situations where each putative employer actually exercises direct and immediate control over the worker’s essential terms of employment, such as wages, schedules, and supervision. That is a tighter standard than the prior indirect control rule, and it is designed to reduce the legal exposure of franchisors, staffing clients, and contractor users.
DOL has not made a final determination, and the public comment period closes at 11:59 p.m. ET on June 22, 2026. The agency’s analysis estimates that the rewrite would save small businesses about $329 million per year in compliance costs and trim $2.31 billion in costs over a decade.
Why This Matters For Self-Employed Contractors
A narrower joint employer test reduces the legal incentive for a franchisor or staffing client to dictate working conditions, which is the same incentive that pushes some clients to reclassify an independent contractor as a W-2 employee. For freelancers operating through a staffing platform, that often means clients are willing to keep using a contractor because the legal cost of doing so has just dropped.
It also matters for solo operators who subcontract work to other 1099s. A loose joint-employer standard can subject a contracting solopreneur to wage-and-hour liability for a subcontractor’s pay, even when there is no direct supervision. The proposed rule pushes that exposure back to whichever entity actually controls the work.
The flip side is fewer levers for misclassified workers to sue up the chain. Independent contractors who suspect they are being treated as employees may have a harder time bringing a brand-name client into a wage claim under the new rule, underscoring the importance of a tightly worded contract that specifies the rate, scope, and termination terms before work starts.
What Self-Employed Readers Should Do Next
Register for the May 28 roundtable through the Microsoft Teams link on the Advocacy page. The session is off the record, attendance is free, and a sole proprietor’s testimony on staffing or franchisor relationships carries the same weight as a trade group’s. Owners who cannot attend live can email written feedback to Janis Reyes at the Office of Advocacy at [email protected].
File a formal comment in the regulations.gov docket before June 22, even if it is two short paragraphs. DOL’s Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis depends on small-business comments to validate the projected cost savings, and concrete examples of how the current rule has changed pricing or contract terms give the agency something to cite in the final rule preamble.
Audit current client contracts for any clause that gives a client direct control over pay, scheduling, or supervision. Those provisions may already meet the proposed joint employer test, and a small rewording can keep the relationship cleanly on the contractor side under either the current or final rule.
What To Watch Next
DOL will compile comments and issue either a final rule or a revised proposal in the second half of 2026. A final rule that mirrors the proposal would shift the federal joint employer line to the most contractor-friendly standard since 2020. Expect immediate court challenges from worker advocacy groups, and watch for parallel state-level fights that may keep the broader prior standard alive in several jurisdictions. Self-employed readers tracking the related federal worker classification fight can follow the DOL independent contractor rule comment window, which closed on April 28, as well as the sister proposal moving on a parallel track.
The SBA roundtable also opens a recurring engagement window. Advocacy typically follows up with a published recap, an Advocacy comment letter to DOL, and a second roundtable closer to the rule’s final action. That cycle is the cleanest path for a self-employed owner to influence a federal rule without hiring a lobbyist.
DOL joint employer rule: Unsplash