Work for hire explained. When employer owns the work.
Work for hire is a copyright doctrine that determines who owns the copyright in a work: the creator (default) or the hiring party (work for hire). For employees, work created within scope of employment is automatically work for hire. For independent contractors, work for hire only applies if (a) covered by a written work-for-hire agreement AND (b) the work falls into one of nine statutory categories. Many founders miss this contractor-specific rule and end up with contractor-owned IP.
Start here.
Work within scope of employment is automatically work for hire. Employer owns.
Work for hire requires BOTH a written work-for-hire agreement AND the work falling into nine statutory categories.
Contributions to collective works, parts of audiovisual works, translations, compilations, instructional texts, tests, atlases, supplementary works, and answer materials.
For contractor work outside the nine categories, work for hire is unavailable. Use IP assignment instead.
Founders who hire contractors without IP assignment may not own the work.
The full picture.
Employee work for hire
Section 101(1) of the Copyright Act: a "work made for hire" includes work prepared by an employee within the scope of employment. The employer is the author and owns the copyright. No special agreement required.
Contractor work for hire
Section 101(2): for non-employees, work for hire applies ONLY if (a) the parties expressly agree in a written instrument signed by both that the work is a work for hire AND (b) the work is specially ordered or commissioned for use as one of nine statutory categories.
The nine statutory categories
(1) Contribution to a collective work. (2) Part of a motion picture or audiovisual work. (3) Translation. (4) Supplementary work. (5) Compilation. (6) Instructional text. (7) Test. (8) Answer material for a test. (9) Atlas. Most software, written content, photography, and design fall OUTSIDE these categories for contractor work.
Why contractor work for hire often fails
Most consulting and freelance work (software development, writing, design) is not in the nine categories. Without a category fit, work for hire is unavailable for that contractor work, regardless of what the agreement says.
IP assignment as alternative
When work for hire is unavailable, an explicit IP assignment in the contractor agreement transfers ownership to the hiring party. Always include IP assignment alongside (or instead of) work for hire language for contractors.
Determining employee vs contractor
Same IRS multi-factor test used for tax classification. Control over work, hours, location, methods determines employee vs contractor.
Common founder mistake
Founders hire a contractor (e.g., a freelance developer) and rely on a verbal or generic agreement. Without explicit IP assignment, the contractor retains ownership of the code. Investors will reject this in diligence.
Best practice
For all employees: clear written employment agreement with IP assignment confirming work-for-hire status for any covered work and broad IP assignment for anything else. For all contractors: written Independent Contractor Agreement with explicit IP assignment plus work-for-hire language where applicable.
Common questions.
What is work for hire?
Who owns work created by my employees?
Does work for hire apply to contractors?
Why does IP assignment matter?
What is the difference between work for hire and assignment?
Do I need written agreements for work for hire?
What happens if I don't secure ownership?
Does this apply to software and creative work?
Can File.Business help secure my IP ownership?
IP setup, done right.
Trademark filing, copyright registration, attorney-vetted IP assignment, and connection to specialty IP attorneys for patents.
This guide is educational. Specific IP decisions require professional legal advice.
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