- (1) Employment does not include services performed as an insurance agent or solicitor if payment for such services is solely by way of commission.
- (2) An insurance solicitor is an employee of an insurance agent and may sell insurance on behalf of the agent. The solicitor usually does not have binding authority, and the business generated by the solicitor is usually owned by the agent, and not the solicitor.
(3) Services performed by a worker selling insurance are exempt if all such services are paid solely by way of commission.
- (a) If any part of the payment for insurance sales services is a salary, all services are covered employment and the total payment, salary, and commission is subject to contribution payments.
- (b) If a worker is guaranteed a minimum salary for any pay period in which sales commissions are less than the guaranteed minimum, all earnings are subject to contribution payments when the worker is paid the guaranteed salary. In any pay period in which the commissions equal or exceed the guaranteed salary, the earnings are considered to be payment solely by way of commission and are not subject to contribution payments.
- (c) If the worker is given advances against future commissions and is required to repay any advances that exceed the commissions, the advances are considered to be payment solely by way of commission.
- (d) If a worker performs both commission sales services and other salaried services, the sales are excluded from employment and the other services are included in covered employment. However, Subsection 35A-4-205(2) applies if the payment for all such services is for the same pay period.
KEY: unemployment compensation, employment tests
Date of Last Change: October 4, 2022
Notice of Continuation: March 3, 2025
Authorizing, and Implemented or Interpreted Law: 35A-4-205