Change description : 2026-05-08 12:57:00: Information about ‘PAYE rules for labour supply chains that include umbrella companies’ has been added. [Guidance and regulation]
An employment intermediary is a person or business who arranges for someone to work for a third person. They are often known as an agency or employment business.
You are an employment intermediary if you supply workers to work for a client or another employment intermediary and the client then pays you or someone connected to you for the worker’s services.
The client is the person or business who the worker does the work for.
Agency rules mean you need to operate PAYE as if the workers you supply are your employees. The payments the worker receives are treated as employment income.
Agency rules do not just apply to employment agencies. If you supply workers for your clients or for other employment intermediaries then you need to check if you have to operate PAYE.
always works from their own home, or on premises not controlled or managed by the client — unless the type of service being provided to the client means the worker must be at those premises
provides their services as an actor, singer, musician or other entertainer, a fashion, photographic or artist’s model
Agency rules do not apply if the worker is already employed by someone else in the labour supply chain. That employer must operate PAYE, not the agency. This includes if your workers are employed through an umbrella company.
More than one employment intermediary in a contractual chain
Where more than one UK employment intermediary is involved, you are treated as the employer if your business is the one that has the contract with the end client.
If there is more than one employment intermediary in a contractual chain and only one of you is in the UK, then the UK business is responsible for fulfilling PAYE obligations for the worker.
Workers supplied to work outside the UK
You must still operate PAYE if you send a worker abroad and they would normally qualify for UK PAYE deductions.
For example, an employment intermediary supplies 4 UK residents to work for 3 weeks in the Netherlands for a Dutch company. You should operate PAYE for this period if the agency rules apply.
You do not need to operate PAYE if you’re a UK agency and you are supplying non-UK resident workers to a client that is based abroad.
Workers supplied to a non-UK employer or agency with no UK presence
If a worker works in the UK for an employer who has no presence in the UK and the PAYE regulations do not apply, there are rules that can treat someone else as the employer.
If the employee works for another person in the UK, then that person is treated as the employer.
If a third party is involved, for example an agency, then the UK agency that contracts with the client is treated as the employer.
We have linked to a new page about how to appeal employment intermediary penalties in the section: 'Reporting requirements for employment intermediaries who do not need to operate PAYE'.
7 March 2024
The opening times for the telephone helpline have been updated.
8 March 2023
Details of the off-payroll working rules prior to April 2021 have been included where appropriate.
7 March 2023
Details of the off-payroll working rules prior to April 2021 have been removed.
29 April 2021
Information about working through an umbrella company has been added to the exceptions to agency rules section.
28 September 2020
The opening times under 'Reporting requirements for employment intermediaries who do not need to operate PAYE' have been updated to 8:30am to 4:30pm.
15 April 2020
The opening times under 'Reporting requirements for employment intermediaries who do not need to operate PAYE' have been updated to 8:30am to 4pm.
6 April 2016
This page has been update to include a YouTube link to 'Who is an employment intermediary?'. A contact telephone number has also been added to the page.