Why Clients Default to Inside IR35 (and What This Means for Contractors)

Published On: June 30th, 2026Categories: News

If you’ve ever had a contract assessed as inside IR35 and felt frustrated or powerless, you’re not alone.

Many contractors find that roles which should fall outside IR35 are classified inside – sometimes because the client simply doesn’t want to take the risk.

Since the 2021 reforms, the responsibility for deciding IR35 status (and the potential tax liability if that decision is wrong) moved from the contractor to the end client. That single change reshaped the market. Clients became cautious, sometimes overly so.

Understanding why this happens helps you plan ahead, respond constructively, and recognise when an assessment might not have been carried out correctly.

Key Takeaways

  • Since 2021, clients – not contractors – carry the IR35 tax liability
  • Each engagement must be assessed individually, blanket decisions are non-compliant
  • Fear of penalties and administrative burden drives many clients to play safe
  • Contractors can respond constructively by demonstrating independence and professionalism
  • The market is slowly rebalancing as clients gain confidence in compliant, case-by-case assessments

The Risk Shift – Why 2021 Changed Everything

What Changed in the Legislation?

Before 2021, contractors decided their own IR35 status and carried the financial risk if HMRC later disagreed.

Under the off-payroll working rules introduced for medium and large organisations, that responsibility moved to the end client. If HMRC challenges an outside IR35 determination and wins, the client becomes liable for back-dated tax, employer National Insurance, interest and penalties.

Clients Must Make Individual Assessments – It’s a Legal Requirement

The legislation requires every engagement to be assessed on its own merits. Clients must issue a written Status Determination Statement (SDS) explaining the outcome and their reasoning.

Applying a single “inside IR35” decision to every contractor – known as a blanket determination – is not compliant with HMRC’s guidance.

Clients can use a consistent process, but they must still review each role individually, taking into account working practices, control, substitution and other relevant factors.

Why That Makes Clients Cautious

The potential consequences of getting a status call wrong are serious:

  • Large, unexpected tax bills
  • Reputational damage if HMRC investigates
  • Costly internal audits and adviser fees

It’s easier (and seemingly safer) for some organisations to default everyone to inside IR35 rather than invest time and expertise in proper assessments.

The Financial and Compliance Pressures on Clients

Penalties and Reputational Risk

If HMRC decides a role was wrongly treated as outside IR35, the client can be pursued for multiple years of unpaid tax, employer NI, and interest. In high-profile cases, HMRC has publicly named organisations that failed to comply, so reputational damage is also a major concern.

Administrative Complexity

Each assessment requires a review of contracts, working arrangements and reporting lines.

For companies with dozens or hundreds of contractors, this creates a heavy administrative burden. Many lack in-house IR35 specialists and rely on cautious HR or legal teams who prefer to play safe.

Blanket Decisions and Risk Aversion in Practice

What Is a Blanket Determination?

A blanket determination is when a client treats all contractor roles as inside IR35 without reviewing individual circumstances.

This approach is non-compliant because HMRC expects clients to make individual, reasoned assessments supported by evidence and to document those decisions in the SDS.

Why Some Clients Do It Anyway

  • Simplicity – one policy is quicker to implement
  • Fear – perceived as lower risk than making an outside call and being wrong
  • Lack of clarity – some organisations misunderstand their legal obligations

Why It Harms Both Sides

Blanket decisions create unnecessary friction.

  • Contractors lose the ability to work independently through their Limited Companies
  • Clients reduce their own flexibility and talent pool, as skilled contractors often move to competitors offering fairer, case-by-case assessments
  • HMRC guidance is clear: consistency is fine, but copy-and-paste decisions are not

How Contractors can Respond Constructively

Stay Professional and Factual

When you receive an inside IR35 SDS that doesn’t feel accurate, avoid frustration or blame.

The client’s motivation is usually risk management, not mistrust of you personally.

Keep communication collaborative and polite – your professionalism strengthens your credibility.

Demonstrate Independence Early

Before a determination is finalised, share evidence that you operate as a genuine business:

  • Defined scope of work or statement of deliverables
  • Proof of business insurance
  • Examples of previous projects delivered autonomously
  • Confirmation that you set your own schedule or supply your own equipment

These signals can reassure cautious clients that classifying your role as outside IR35 is both fair and defensible.

Remind Clients of Their Obligations

It’s perfectly reasonable to note, respectfully, that HMRC requires individual assessments.

Sometimes clients default inside simply because they’re unaware that blanket decisions breach compliance. A calm, informed reminder may encourage them to review your engagement properly.

Use the Disagreement Process if Needed

If you believe an SDS is wrong, you can formally challenge it.

  • Write to the client referencing the SDS, explaining why you think it’s inaccurate
  • Provide factual evidence (contract clauses, scope documents, working-practice examples)
  • The client must respond in writing within 45 days, either confirming or amending the decision

Even if the result doesn’t change, the process demonstrates that you understand the rules and value compliance.

What It Means for Rate Negotiation

Inside IR35 contracts often come with higher client costs – employer NI contributions, payroll administration, and the perceived risk premium
At the same time, contractors face lower take-home pay
Understanding both sides lets you negotiate from a position of mutual awareness:

  • Clients factor in risk, contractors factor in tax impact
  • A fair compromise rate helps maintain value for both parties

The Long-Term Trend Towards Better Balance

The initial wave of over-cautious behaviour after the 2021 reforms is slowly settling.
Many organisations now recognise that blanket inside IR35 policies are unsustainable and non-compliant.
To protect themselves properly, they’re investing in:

  • Independent IR35 audits and role-specific reviews
  • Specialist software or consultancy assessments
  • Training for hiring managers on applying tests consistently

As confidence and understanding grow, more clients are returning to fair, role-by-role assessments, creating a healthier market for genuine contractors.

FAQs

The penalties for incorrect IR35 decisions can be severe, including backdated tax, employer National Insurance, and interest charges. For some, classifying everyone inside IR35 (a blanket decision) feels like the safer option, even though it limits flexibility and talent access.

No. Blanket decisions are not compliant with HMRC’s off-payroll working rules. While clients can apply a consistent process across contractors, each engagement must still be individually assessed based on control, substitution, and mutuality of obligation.

Yes. Contractors have the legal right to dispute an IR35 decision through the formal SDS disagreement process. You can write to the client with evidence that your engagement reflects genuine independence and the client must respond in writing within 45 days.

Inside IR35 contracts usually result in lower take-home pay for contractors, since tax and National Insurance are deducted at source. Contractors tend to negotiate higher day rates to reflect the added tax burden and maintain fair net income.

Present yourself as a genuine business before the contract starts. Provide documentation such as proof of business insurance, a defined scope of work, examples of past projects, and evidence that you supply your equipment. These details help reassure clients that an outside IR35 classification is fair and defensible.

Final Thoughts

IR35 has made contracting more complex for everyone, and it’s understandable that clients sometimes err on the side of caution.

But when both sides understand their responsibilities – and when assessments are done properly – fair outcomes are possible.

If you’ve received an inside IR35 decision that feels inaccurate or want advice on how to approach the discussion professionally, we can help.

At SG Accounting, we support contractors and clients alike – from reviewing SDSs and clarifying compliance to helping you stay organised across both Limited Company and umbrella arrangements.

author avatar
Kerry Newman Director of SG Accounting
Kerry joined SG back in July 2017, and is MAATQB qualified, and currently working towards her ACCA. Specialising in contractor accounting for 10 years, Kerry has always been an accountant, and has spent most of her career focusing on the needs of small business and contractors.

(Header image: designed by Drazen Zigic – Freepik.com)

Note: All the information and advice in this blog post was correct at the time of writing.

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