An EOT is a perpetual purpose trust that holds the company's shares for the benefit of employees. Because it is not a qualified retirement plan and is generally not regulated under ERISA, it skips the coverage mechanics that constrain an ESOP (age and service thresholds, nondiscrimination percentage tests, and exclusions such as collectively bargained employees). Instead, the trust document defines the beneficiary group and how benefits flow. That flexibility is why workforce type usually matters less than people expect.
Part-time staff. Generally straightforward to include. With no individual ERISA share accounts, no hours-of-service floor dictates eligibility. The benefit can be designed broadly and need not be cash profit-sharing alone: it can take the form of retirement contributions, better healthcare, reduced hours, or other benefits tuned to the group.
Independent contractors vs. employees. Keep two things separate:
- Whether someone is a W-2 employee or a 1099 contractor is set by worker-classification rules (the IRS common-law test, the FLSA economic-realities test, state tests like California's ABC test), not by the EOT. Setting up a trust does not reclassify anyone, and you should not restructure classifications to fit it.
- The trust can name beneficiaries beyond full-time employees if the document provides for it. But paying trust-funded benefits to a contractor can carry different tax and reporting treatment, and can itself become evidence of an employment relationship. So contractor status rarely makes or breaks an EOT, but extending benefits to contractors is a drafting decision with real exposure.
Unionized workforce. Unions and employee ownership are broadly compatible, and collectively bargained employees are often included. The work is mostly practical: a collective bargaining agreement may already set wages and benefits, so EOT profit-sharing has to be reconciled with it, sometimes layered in, sometimes traded against existing terms. Because wage and benefit changes are often a mandatory subject of bargaining, engage the union early and treat it as a negotiation.
One tax note: UK EOTs carry a capital-gains exemption for the selling owner; the US has no equivalent today, so do not assume UK treatment applies. This is general education, not legal or tax advice; confirm your specifics with an attorney and CPA experienced in employee-ownership transitions.
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