Joint Employer Status

food delivery driver

What is Joint Employer Status?

On April 22, 2026, the U.S. Department of Labor announced a proposed rule that could significantly impact workers who have been denied wages, overtime pay, benefits, or legal protections. The proposed regulation seeks to clarify when more than one company can be held legally responsible as an employer’s employee.

This legal concept is known as joint employer status, and it can be incredibly important for workers employed through staffing agencies, subcontractors, franchise systems, delivery platforms, security companies, healthcare staffing companies, construction subcontractors, and other layered business structures.

If your paycheck came from one company—but another company controlled your schedule, work conditions, pay structure, or day-to-day responsibilities—you may have legal claims against multiple entities.

security guard

What is a Joint Employer?

A joint employer exists when two or more companies share enough control over a worker that both may be legally responsible for workplace violations.

The issue commonly arises when:

  • A staffing agency hires workers for another company
  • A subcontractor supplies labor to a larger corporation
  • Franchises operate under broader franchisor oversight
  • Security guards work at a third-party location
  • Delivery drivers work through layered contractor arrangements
  • Healthcare workers are placed through staffing networks
package delivery driver

The New Department of Labor Rule (2026)

According to the proposed rule from the U.S. Department of Labor, courts and investigators may evaluate whether a second company:

  1. Has authority to hire or fire workers. Did another company have the power to remove workers, approve hiring decisions, or terminate employment?
  2. Controls schedules or working conditions. Did another company control shifts, hours, uniforms, workplace policies, discipline, and required procedures?
  3. Determines how workers are paid. Did another company influence hourly wages, overtime policies, mileage reimbursement, commissions, and bonus structures?
  4. Maintains employment records. Did another company manage payroll records, scheduling systems, employment files, and timekeeping systems?
warehouse worker

What the Rule Says is NOT Enough

The proposed rule specifically suggests that some ordinary business relationships may not automatically create joint employer liability. For example:

  • Simply being part of the same franchise network
  • Using the same vendors
  • Participating in apprenticeship programs
  • Certain standard business relationships

This could provide protection for businesses that do not directly control workers.

healthcare workers

Why This Matters for Workers

Many workers are told: “You can’t sue us—we’re not technically your employer.” That argument may become much harder to make when multiple companies are heavily involved in controlling workers. Joint employer claims may allow worker to pursue compensation for:

  • unpaid overtime
  • unpaid wages
  • denied breaks
  • mileage reimbursement violations
  • employee misclassification
  • benefit violations
  • Family and Medical Leave Act violations

This can be especially important when a smaller employer lacks the money to pay a judgement. A larger corporate partner may also be responsible.

construction worker

Industries Most Likely to be Affected

This rule could heavily impact industries that frequently use layered employment structures such as delivery services, security companies, construction, healthcare staffing, franchise businesses, warehouse and logistics.

security guard

Can You Sue Multiple Employers?

Potentially, yes. If multiple companies exercised meaningful control over your employment, you may have legal rights against all responsible parties.

Every case depends on:

  • employment contracts
  • scheduling systems
  • pay records
  • management structures
  • workplace policies
  • communication records

An attorney can evaluate whether joint employer liability may apply.

Forester Haynie can help.

How Forester Haynie Can Help with Joint Employer Status

At Forester Haynie, we investigate wage and hour violations involving complex employer relationships.

Our firm has represented thousands of workers in employment-related claims involving unpaid mileage reimbursement, wage violations, worker misclassification, large corporate employment structures.

If you believe multiple companies may be responsible for unpaid wages or labor violations, contact us for a free case evaluation.

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