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    This is general guidance, not professional advice.

    Understanding Your Employment Status

    13 min read
    Reviewed Apr 2026

    Disclaimer: BeautyKiln gives general information, not legal, tax or financial advice. Talk to a qualified professional before making big decisions.

    8 - Understanding Your Employment Status

    This is probably the most confusing topic in the beauty industry. If you rent a chair in someone else's salon, are you employed or self-employed? The answer affects your tax, your rights, your insurance, and what happens if things go wrong. Get it wrong and HMRC can come after you - or your salon - for years of unpaid tax and National Insurance. This guide breaks down how HMRC and the courts decide, what the real-world tests are, and what to do if you think your status is wrong.

    Quick rule of thumb: it's not what your contract says that matters - it's what actually happens day-to-day.


    Why this matters so much

    Your employment status decides:

    • Who pays your tax and NI - if you're employed, the salon handles it through PAYE. If you're self-employed, you do it yourself through Self-Assessment.
    • What rights you get - employees get holiday pay, sick pay, pension auto-enrolment, protection from unfair dismissal. Self-employed people get none of that.
    • Who's liable if HMRC investigates - if HMRC decides you were actually employed all along, the salon could owe years of employer's NI (13.8%), and you could owe back-tax.
    • Your insurance - your public liability and professional indemnity policies depend on your status being correct.

    The beauty industry is one of HMRC's priority sectors for status investigations. They know chair rental is widespread, and they know some arrangements are really disguised employment. In May 2025, HMRC published sector-specific guidance for hair and beauty - a clear signal they're paying attention.


    The three categories

    UK law recognises three categories. This trips people up because most people only think there are two.

    StatusWhat it meansTaxRights
    EmployeeYou work for someone under a contract of employmentSalon pays your tax and NI through PAYEFull employment rights (holiday, sick pay, pension, unfair dismissal protection, redundancy)
    WorkerYou're not fully employed but you're not truly independent eitherDepends on arrangement - often PAYESome rights: minimum wage, paid holiday, pension auto-enrolment, protection from discrimination. No unfair dismissal protection.
    Self-employedYou run your own business and contract with clients/salonsYou handle your own tax through Self-AssessmentNo employment rights (but you get to claim business expenses and have more flexibility)

    The "worker" category is the one most people forget. It sits in the middle. After the Supreme Court's Uber ruling in 2021, this category matters more than ever - see below.


    HMRC's tests: how they decide your status

    HMRC doesn't use a single test. They look at the whole picture of your working arrangement. Here are the key factors, applied specifically to chair rental and salon work:

    1. Control

    The question: Does the salon control how, when, and where you do your work?

    Self-employed indicatorEmployment indicator
    You set your own hours and daysThe salon tells you when to be there
    You choose what services to offerThe salon decides your service menu
    You set your own pricesThe salon sets the prices
    You decide how to do a haircut/treatmentThe salon dictates specific methods or products
    You can turn down bookingsYou're expected to take every client sent your way

    In practice: If you genuinely choose your own hours, decide your own prices, and pick which clients to take, that's a strong self-employment indicator.

    Tip for new starters: Write down how your working day actually looks. Who decides your hours? Who sets your prices? Who books your clients? If the answer to any of those is "the salon," you may not be as self-employed as you think.

    2. Substitution

    The question: Can you send someone else to do the work in your place?

    Self-employed indicatorEmployment indicator
    You can send a qualified substitute and the salon can't refuse (unless they're not qualified)Only you can do the work - no substitutes allowed
    You've actually used a substituteThe contract says you can substitute but nobody ever has

    In practice: This is a powerful test. If you could genuinely ask another qualified stylist to cover your chair while you're away, and the salon would accept that, it strongly suggests self-employment. If the salon would say "no, we only want you," that points toward employment.

    3. Financial risk

    The question: Do you risk your own money in the business?

    Self-employed indicatorEmployment indicator
    You pay chair rent whether or not you have clientsYou only pay when you're there, or pay nothing
    You buy your own products and toolsThe salon provides everything
    You could make a loss in a quiet weekYou get paid regardless
    You invest in marketing, training, equipmentThe salon covers all costs
    You have your own insuranceThe salon's insurance covers you

    In practice: If you're paying £200/week chair rent, buying your own colour, and having a dead week where you barely cover costs - that financial risk is a strong self-employment signal.

    4. Integration

    The question: Are you part of the salon's business, or running your own business that happens to operate from their premises?

    Self-employed indicatorEmployment indicator
    You have your own business name/brandYou work under the salon's name
    You have your own client listThe salon owns the client database
    You market yourself independentlyThe salon does all marketing and you're listed as "our team"
    You do your own bookkeeping and taxThe salon handles admin for you
    You have your own website or social mediaYou only appear on the salon's pages

    5. Equipment

    The question: Who provides the tools?

    Self-employed indicatorEmployment indicator
    You bring your own scissors, dryers, productsThe salon provides all equipment
    You take your tools with you if you leaveEverything stays at the salon

    Real scenarios

    Scenario 1: Sarah

    Sarah rents a chair for £250/week. She sets her own hours, uses her own products, sets her own prices, and has her own Instagram page. But the salon books all her clients through their reception desk and takes the bookings on her behalf.

    Analysis: Mostly self-employed indicators. The booking arrangement is an employment indicator, but one factor alone doesn't decide it. If Sarah could refuse bookings and the salon is essentially just passing on enquiries, it probably doesn't change her status. If the salon controls her diary and tells her who to see and when - that's more concerning. Sarah should consider managing her own bookings to be safe.

    Scenario 2: Marcus

    Marcus works in a barbershop. He pays 40% of his takings to the shop owner instead of a fixed rent. He uses the shop's clippers and products. The shop sets the prices. He has to be there Tuesday to Saturday, 9am to 6pm. He can't send a substitute.

    Analysis: This looks like employment. The shop controls his hours, sets the prices, provides equipment, and he can't substitute. The percentage commission model doesn't automatically make him self-employed - it's just a different way of paying him. Marcus is at risk of being misclassified.

    Scenario 3: Priya

    Priya rents a treatment room two days a week for £100/day. She's a beauty therapist. She brings all her own products and equipment. She has her own website, sets her own prices, books her own clients, and also works from home on other days. The salon can't tell her what treatments to offer.

    Analysis: Strong self-employment. Priya runs her own business from multiple locations, controls everything about her work, takes financial risk, and operates independently. This is textbook self-employment.


    The CEST tool

    HMRC's Check Employment Status for Tax (CEST) tool is a free online questionnaire at gov.uk/check-employment-status-for-tax. You answer questions about your working arrangement and it gives you a result: employed, self-employed, or undetermined.

    Should you use it? Yes, it's a useful starting point. But be aware:

    • It gives an "undetermined" result in a surprising number of cases - which doesn't help much
    • HMRC says it will stand by the result if you answered the questions accurately - but "accurately" is doing a lot of heavy lifting there
    • It doesn't account for industry-specific nuances very well
    • Courts have disagreed with CEST results in several cases

    Use it, but don't treat it as the final word. If the result surprises you or comes back undetermined, get proper advice.

    Tip for new starters: Run the CEST tool before you sign any chair rental agreement. If it comes back "employed" or "undetermined," that's a signal the arrangement needs changing before you commit.


    The Uber ruling and what it means for you

    In February 2021, the UK Supreme Court ruled that Uber drivers were "workers," not self-employed contractors. The key reasons:

    • Uber set the fares (control over pricing)
    • Uber could penalise drivers for rejecting rides (limited autonomy)
    • Uber controlled the relationship with passengers (no independent client relationship)

    What this means for beauty: if a salon controls your pricing, disciplines you for turning down clients, and owns the client relationship, the Uber ruling strengthens the argument that you're a worker - not self-employed. The ruling didn't change the law, but it clarified how existing tests should be applied, and tribunals have been more willing to find "worker" status since.


    HMRC's May 2025 hair and beauty guidance

    In May 2025, HMRC published updated sector-specific guidance for hair and beauty businesses. Key points:

    • HMRC acknowledged that genuine chair rental arrangements can be self-employment - they're not trying to reclassify everyone
    • But they warned that many arrangements labelled as chair rental are actually employment in practice
    • They specifically flagged: commission-based pay, salon-controlled booking systems, mandatory hours, and salon-provided products as risk factors
    • They signalled increased compliance activity in the sector

    If you haven't reviewed your arrangement against this guidance, do it now.


    What happens if HMRC decides you're actually employed

    If HMRC investigates and decides a "self-employed" chair renter was actually an employee:

    For the salon owner:

    • Back-payment of employer's NI contributions (13.8%) - potentially for several years
    • PAYE tax that should have been deducted
    • Interest on all unpaid amounts
    • Possible penalties of 30-100% of the underpaid tax (depending on whether it was careless or deliberate)

    For the worker:

    • You might owe additional tax, though HMRC often pursues the "employer" first
    • You would gain employment rights retrospectively - holiday pay, pension contributions, etc.
    • Your Self-Assessment returns would need correcting

    The amounts can be huge. A salon with 5 misclassified chair renters over 3 years could face a bill well into five figures.


    What to do if you think you've been misclassified

    1. Don't panic. Being misclassified isn't your fault if you didn't set up the arrangement.
    2. Document your actual working arrangement - write down who controls what, who provides what, what actually happens day-to-day.
    3. Run the CEST tool as a first check.
    4. Talk to the salon owner - if you both agree the arrangement needs changing, it's easier to fix proactively than after an HMRC investigation.
    5. Get professional advice - a tax advisor or employment solicitor who knows the beauty industry can review your situation. This typically costs £100-300 for an initial consultation but could save thousands.
    6. Contact ACAS - free, impartial advice on employment status disputes (0300 123 1100).
    7. Don't just change the contract wording - remember, HMRC looks at what actually happens, not what the paperwork says. Rewriting a contract without changing the real arrangement achieves nothing.

    Protecting yourself

    Whether you're a salon owner or a chair renter, here's how to keep your arrangement clean:

    If you're a chair renter (self-employed):

    • Have a clear written licence agreement (not an employment contract)
    • Set your own prices, hours, and services
    • Manage your own bookings where possible
    • Buy your own key products and tools
    • Get your own insurance
    • Register for Self-Assessment and pay your own tax
    • Have your own business presence (social media, Google profile)

    If you're a salon owner with chair renters:

    • Don't control their hours, prices, or methods
    • Let them book their own clients
    • Don't include them in staff rotas, appraisals, or disciplinary procedures
    • Make sure the financial arrangement reflects genuine self-employment (fixed rent, not commission)
    • Keep the licence agreement up to date and make sure reality matches the paperwork

    What to do next

    1. Honestly assess your working arrangement against the five tests above - control, substitution, financial risk, integration, equipment
    2. Run the CEST tool at gov.uk/check-employment-status-for-tax
    3. Read HMRC's May 2025 guidance for hair and beauty - search "HMRC employment status hair beauty" on gov.uk
    4. If anything looks wrong, get advice before HMRC comes knocking - it's cheaper to fix proactively
    5. Make sure your contract matches reality - and if it doesn't, change the reality, not just the contract

    Who to Contact

    • HMRC employment status helpline - 0300 123 2326 (Free)
    • HMRC Self Assessment - 0300 200 3310 (Free)
    • ACAS - free advice on employment status and rights - 0300 123 1100 (Free)
    • HMRC CEST tool - gov.uk/check-employment-status-for-tax (Free)
    • National Hair & Beauty Federation (NHBF) - sector guidance on chair rental - nhbf.co.uk (Free for members)
    • Citizens Advice - general employment rights guidance - citizensadvice.org.uk - 0800 144 8848 (Free)
    • Employment solicitor - for complex cases or disputes - expect £150-300/hour (Paid)

    Sources

    • Employment Rights Act 1996, legislation.gov.uk
    • Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003, legislation.gov.uk
    • Uber BV v Aslam [2021] UKSC 5, supremecourt.uk
    • HMRC Check Employment Status for Tax (CEST), gov.uk/check-employment-status-for-tax
    • HMRC employment status guidance for hair and beauty sector (May 2025), gov.uk
    • IR35 legislation (off-payroll working rules), legislation.gov.uk

    • Self-Assessment for Hairdressers: Complete Guide
    • Chair Rental: The Complete Guide for Renters
    • Chair Rental Agreements: What Must Be Included
    • Insurance for Chair Renters
    • Making Tax Digital: What It Means for You
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    Key Contacts

    HMRC employment status helpline

    0300 123 2326Free

    HMRC Self Assessment

    0300 200 3310Free

    ACAS

    free advice on employment status and rights - 0300 123 1100Free

    HMRC CEST tool

    gov.uk/check-employment-status-for-taxFree

    National Hair & Beauty Federation (NHBF)

    sector guidance on chair rental - nhbf.co.uk (Free for members)

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