Do freelancers/contractors count in workforce disclosures?
When small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) prepare workforce disclosures for the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) or the Voluntary Sustainability Reporting Standard for SMEs (VSME), one question comes up again and again: do freelancers and contractors count?
The short answer is: no, not in your core workforce disclosures. But you may choose to mention them separately.
What the standards say
Under the VSME Basic Module – Workforce: General characteristics (B8), SMEs must disclose the number of employees in headcount or full-time equivalents, broken down by contract type, gender, and country.
This means:
- ✅ Employees on your payroll are counted.
- ❌ Freelancers and independent contractors are not, because they are self-employed.
- ❌ Agency staff provided by a third party are not, because they belong to the agency’s workforce.
If you use the Comprehensive Module (C5), you may additionally disclose:
- the number of self-employed people working exclusively for you, and
- temporary workers provided by employment agencies.
This gives banks and clients a clearer view of your reliance on non-standard labour, but it’s optional.
Why the distinction matters
- Accuracy: Including freelancers in employee totals would overstate your workforce size.
- Comparability: Large clients and banks need consistent data across suppliers, which is why the standard separates “own workforce” from “workers in the value chain”.
- Transparency: If your business relies heavily on contractors, you can still mention this in narrative form to show your workforce model.
Practical guidance for SMEs
- Count only employees on your payroll for B8 disclosures.
- Exclude freelancers, consultants, and agency workers unless you are using the Comprehensive Module.
- Be transparent if contractors are a big part of your model — add a note in plain language.
- Stay consistent year-on-year. Don’t change your method unless you formally move from Basic to Comprehensive reporting.
- Check requests from banks/clients — they may want to see contractor numbers even if the Basic Module doesn’t require it.
Example
A digital agency has:
- 12 employees on payroll (10 full-time, 2 part-time)
- 5 freelancers working on design projects
- 3 developers hired via an external agency
Basic Module disclosure (B8): Headcount = 12 employees (or ~11.5 FTE).
Optional Comprehensive Module (C5): 5 freelancers working exclusively for the company, and 3 agency workers.
This way, the report is both correct and transparent.
Key Terms
- Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) — An EU law that requires large companies — and eventually some medium-sized ones — to report on their environmental and social impacts. Smaller suppliers are not directly in scope but may be asked for CSRD-style data by banks or bigger clients.
- Voluntary Sustainability Reporting Standard for SMEs (VSME) — A simplified framework designed to help SMEs share sustainability information. It is voluntary but can help SMEs respond to client or bank requests.
- Basic Module — The minimum set of sustainability disclosures under the VSME. It covers essential topics such as energy use, greenhouse gas emissions, waste, workforce data, and basic governance issues.
- Comprehensive Module — An extended version of the VSME reporting standard. It includes additional details on strategy, transition plans, and targets. Banks or large clients may request this level of detail.
- Employee (for CSRD/VSME purposes) — Someone under a contract of employment with the reporting undertaking.
- Freelancer/Contractor — A self-employed person working on a project or service basis; generally not included in workforce disclosures unless reported under the Comprehensive Module.
- Agency worker — Someone employed by a third-party staffing agency; not counted in the SME’s workforce headcount.