Fair Work Centre — For Employers
Contractor classification, fatigue management and EBA-covered fleets create some of the highest-stakes employment law risk in transport. Get advice built for your business.
The Problem
Owner-driver and contractor arrangements are scrutinised closely under the Fair Work Act 2009, and the Fair Work Ombudsman has increasingly focused enforcement on sham contracting and underpayment in the road transport sector.
Treating a genuine employee driver as an independent contractor to simplify payroll exposes the business to back-pay, superannuation and civil penalty risk.
Rosters built for delivery schedules still need to comply with award-based rest break and minimum engagement rules — fatigue compliance and Fair Work compliance aren’t the same thing.
Many transport businesses operate under enterprise agreements rather than the award — misapplying EBA terms across a large driver workforce multiplies the compliance risk.
Dismissing a driver over a safety or fatigue breach without a fair process is a common source of successful unfair dismissal claims.
How We Help
Fair Work Centre helps transport and logistics employers navigate driver classification, EBA compliance and safety-related disciplinary processes.
Our advice reflects current Fair Work Commission decisions on owner-driver classification and fatigue-related terminations.
How It Works
Call 1300 161 828 or book a free initial advice call about your business.
We review your specific classification, contracts and compliance risk.
Get a clear compliance plan built for your business and workforce.
A short advice call now can prevent significant back-pay exposure across your driver workforce.
Membership
Common Questions
It depends on the substance of the relationship — control, integration into the business and financial risk — not the label in the contract. Misclassifying a genuine employee as an owner-driver risks back-pay and penalties.
Once approved by the Fair Work Commission, an enterprise agreement generally replaces the award for covered employees, provided it passes the ‘better off overall’ test. Applying an expired or misapplied EBA is a common compliance gap.
Serious breaches can justify a faster process, but drivers should generally still be given a chance to respond before a final decision, unless the conduct is extremely serious.
No — fatigue management rules and Fair Work entitlements are separate obligations. Meeting fatigue compliance doesn’t automatically mean your rostering meets award or NES requirements.
This may be a genuine redundancy if the role is no longer required, but correct consultation, notice and redundancy pay obligations still apply under the National Employment Standards.
Liability depends on the contractual relationships and level of control, but principal businesses can face reputational and, in some cases, legal exposure for subcontractor non-compliance.
No. Fair Work Centre is an independent private advisory service for employers. We are not associated with or authorised by the Fair Work Ombudsman, the Fair Work Commission, or any government authority.
Fair Work Centre is an independent private organisation providing advisory services to employers only. It is not associated with or authorised by the Fair Work Ombudsman, the Fair Work Commission, or any government authority.