Employment test

The employment test is one of 4 PSB tests that taxpayers earning PSI can use to self-assess as a PSB. If you self-assess as a PSB, the PSI rules will not apply to the PSI you earnt in that income year.

You must also meet the 80% rule to self-assess using the employment test.

To pass the employment test, your business must employ or contract others to help perform work that generates your PSI, and you must meet one of the following conditions:

  • at least 20% of the principal work is performed by others
  • one or more apprentices are employed for at least 6 months of the income year.

If you operate through a company, partnership or trust and you have more than one individual generating PSI, you will need to work out whether you pass the employment test for each individual. It is possible to have different outcomes for different individuals.

Principal work performed by others

To meet this condition, your business must employ or contract others to perform at least 20% of the principal work that generates your PSI.

Principal work is:

  • the work you must perform under a contract or agreement that you’re paid for
  • central to meeting your contractual obligations between you and your client.

It does not include work that supports you in meeting your contractual obligations, such as administrative tasks or bookkeeping.

To work out whether at least 20% of the principal work is being performed by your employee or contractor, you need to determine the market value of the principal work completed by your workers for the contract.

If that market value is 20% or more of the total contract price charged to your client, then this condition will be met.

When applying the employment test, you cannot count principal work completed by the following entities:

  • a business (company, partnership or trust) associated with you or your business
  • yourself as an employee of your business
  • other individuals in your business who earn PSI through their own contracts with clients.

Apprentices

To meet this condition, you must employ one or more apprentices for at least 6 months of the income year.

An apprentice is a person who works for a fixed period of time to learn a trade, business or skill. This includes government or industry group training programs. Research and other assistants are not considered to be apprentices.

An apprentice doesn't need to be apprenticed directly to your business. For example, apprentices supplied through a government program to work for a business as part of their trade training may meet this requirement.

An apprentice may work periodically throughout the income year as long as their total time worked is at least 6 months.

Personal services income

Steps Progress

What is PSI?

4 mins

Is the income PSI?

5 mins

Income that is not PSI

9 mins

Whose PSI is it?

7 mins

Working out if the PSI rules apply: self-assess as a personal service business (PSB)

2 mins

The 80% rule

5 mins

Results test

8 mins

Unrelated clients test

5 mins

Employment test

5 mins

Business premises test

7 mins

Obtaining work through an agency

5 mins

Apply for a personal services business determination (PSBD)

3 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply

2 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: claiming deductions

11 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: how to attribute PSI

8 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: PAYG

18 mins

What to do when the PSI rules apply: completing your tax return

4 mins

What to do if the PSI rules don’t apply

3 mins

Record keeping for PSI

1 mins

Help for PSI

1 mins

Case study: instructions

1 mins

Case studies: sole trader

11 mins

Case studies: partnership

12 mins

Case studies: company

12 mins

Case studies: trust

12 mins

Related courses

1 mins

Course Feedback