How Remote Workers Can Stay Compliant When Working for US Companies

Your contract calling you a contractor does not make you one under local law, and misclassification can cost both workers and companies significantly. This guide explains how classification actually works, what your tax obligations are, and how to stay protected long-term.

Mark

Published: March 13, 2026
Updated: March 13, 2026

Photo by Cytonn Photography on Unsplash

Most articles will tell you “just follow the rules.”

Super helpful, right?

Here’s what’s actually happening.

Latin American labor laws were written decades ago, back when “remote work” meant your boss let you take papers home on Friday.

These laws assume physical offices, punch cards, and local employers.

Now you’re sitting in Buenos Aires working for a startup in Austin. Or in Mexico City handling customer support for a London-based company.

The laws haven’t caught up. But the tax authorities definitely have.

And it’s not just the company that gets hit.

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Understanding What Kind of Worker You Actually Are

In the US, the line between contractor and employee is blurry. In Latin America, it’s not blurry at all.

It’s just drawn in a completely different place than you’d expect.

Think you’re a contractor because your contract says “independent contractor”?

Doesn’t matter.

Here are the factors that actually determine your classification in most Latin American countries:

  • Control. Does the company tell you when to work? Do they require you to attend daily standups?
  • Tools. Did they send you a laptop? Pay for your software subscriptions? Provide the tools you need to do the job?
  • Exclusivity. Are you working only for them? Even if it’s not written down, are you realistically able to take other clients?

If you answered yes to most of these, you’re probably an employee under local law, regardless of what your contract says.

Colombia learned this the hard way with the Glovo case.

The delivery platform was hit with 79 million euros in fines because their “independent contractors” were actually employees by local standards.

The Mexico Situation Deserves Special Attention

If you’re working from Mexico, listen up.

Mexico has something called REPSE registration. It’s a registry for outsourcing companies, and if your employer isn’t registered (and many aren’t), both the company and workers could be in violation.

The penalties aren’t just financial. We’re talking potential jail time for company executives.

Mexico also has strict rules about remote work:

  • If you’re working from home more than 40% of the time, your employer legally needs to reimburse you for utilities (internet, electricity, etc.).
  • Digital disconnection laws are under review; reforms could restrict after-hours contact entirely. As of 2026 the reform was still in Senate review, but the direction is clear.
  • You’re entitled to aguinaldo (13th-month bonus) and PTU (profit sharing, typically ~10%). These are legal requirements, not negotiable perks.

What About Taxes?

Deep breath. This part is simpler than it sounds.

If you’re a legitimate contractor, your US employer typically won’t withhold anything from your pay. No US taxes, no US social security.

They might send you a 1099-NEC form if you made over $600, but that’s primarily for their records.

All your tax obligations are local. Examples:

  • Mexico: ISR (income tax) ranging from 1.92% to 35% depending on income; charge IVA (VAT) at 16% on invoices.
  • Brazil: IRPF up to 27.5%.
  • Colombia: 19% VAT.
  • Argentina: additional complexity with currency controls and reporting requirements.

Practical tax tips:

  1. Open a local bank account specifically for this work.
  2. Use services like Wise or Payoneer to receive USD payments and avoid heavy forex fees. Some banks charge 30–50% in conversion costs if you’re not careful.
  3. File taxes quarterly in most countries.
  4. Track everything: every expense, every reimbursement, every payment.

If this sounds overwhelming, that’s because it is. Which brings us to the next point.

What If You’re Already in a Gray Area?

Maybe your situation isn’t quite right. Don’t panic.

Steps to take:

  1. Assess honestly using the control / tools / exclusivity test.
  2. Talk to your employer. Many US companies genuinely don’t know the rules — they’re not trying to break laws. Come with solutions, not just problems. Suggest an EOR or other fixes.
  3. If they won’t budge, decide whether the role is worth the risk. Brazil processes over 4 million labor litigations annually, and Mexico’s STPS (labor ministry) conducts monthly audits.
  4. If you’re scaling up, consider forming a local entity (e.g., get your RFC in Mexico). It’s more work upfront but protects you long-term.

The Bottom Line

Compliance isn’t sexy. It’s not why you got into remote work.

You wanted freedom, good pay, interesting projects, and the ability to work from anywhere.

But this only works long-term if both sides play by the rules.

You deserve to be classified correctly, to pay the right taxes, and to work with companies that respect both US business practices and Latin American labor laws.

It’s not always easy.

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