What are the possible statuses?

What if you went independent?

What are the possible statuses to work independently?

When considering independence, one key question arises:

Which status should you choose?

In Belgium, several models allow you to work more autonomously:

  • employee
  • umbrella company (payroll)
  • freelancer
  • self-employed

Each status offers a different balance between:

  • security
  • freedom
  • income
  • responsibility

Understanding these differences is essential to choosing a model that fits your profile.


Definition of the main statuses

Before comparing, let’s clarify what each status means.

An employee works for a company under an employment contract.

The employer:

  • pays the salary
  • handles social contributions
  • provides social protection

This is the most secure model, but also the one with the least autonomy.

Umbrella employment is a hybrid model.

You work for clients like an independent, but you are employed by an umbrella company.

This company:

  • invoices clients
  • pays you a salary
  • manages administration

It is often used to test independence while keeping strong social protection.

Freelancer” is not a legal status in Belgium.

It simply refers to someone who works:

  • per mission
  • for multiple clients
  • without a traditional employment contract

In practice, a freelancer is legally self-employed.

A self-employed person works on their own account.

They can operate:

  • as a sole trader
  • through a company (SRL)

The self-employed:

  • invoice clients
  • pay their own social contributions
  • manage their taxes

This status offers the most freedom, but also the most responsibility.

Quick comparison

CriteriaEmployeeUmbrellaFreelancerSelf-employed
Social securityHighHighMediumMedium
FreedomLowMediumHighHigh
AdministrationNoneLowMediumVery high
Income potentialCappedVariableHighTrès élevé
Financial riskLowModerateModerateHigh

But this table is not enough—you need to understand the real implications.

Detailed analysis by criteria

Employee

  • paid leave
  • unemployment benefits
  • pension
  • full health coverage

Umbrella

  • similar protection to employees
  • strong coverage
  • less administrative complexity

Freelancer / Self-employed

  • mandatory social contributions
  • no standard unemployment benefits
  • pension depends on declared income

If security is your top priority, employment or umbrella is often more suitable.

Employee

  • fixed salary
  • possible bonuses
  • gradual progression

Freelancer / Self-employed

  • project or daily-based billing
  • variable income
  • higher earning potential

Example: a €4,000 gross employee can bill €600/day as an independent.

But net income depends on expenses.

Employee

  • fixed schedule
  • predefined objectives
  • limited strategic control

Freelancer / Self-employed

  • choose your missions
  • choose your clients
  • control your organization

More freedom also means more responsibility.

Employee

  • no administrative burden

Umbrella

The company manages:

  • invoicing
  • contributions
  • administration

Self-employed

You manage:

  • accounting
  • VAT
  • social contributions
  • invoicing

Some profiles enjoy this autonomy—others find it constraining.

Common mistakes

Frequent errors when choosing a status:

For example:

A status should be chosen based on:

  • your current situation
  • your market
  • your risk tolerance
  • your professional goals

The key factor: your profile

There is no universally “best” status.

The right choice depends on:

  • your ambition
  • your current stability
  • your commercial ability
  • your financial maturity

Next step: prepare your launch

Once your status is chosen, you need to understand the steps to start your activity.

Simplify my process

Our Indep Roadmap AI guides you step by step to:

  • choose your status
  • prepare administrative steps
  • structure your launch

See all steps to become independent

Discover the official steps to start your activity in Belgium.


FAQ – Choosing your status

In Belgium, “freelancer” is a commercial term. Legally, a freelancer is self-employed.

Yes. Many professionals alternate between employment and freelance work.

Yes, especially in IT, consulting, and digital sectors.

Many professionals start:

  • as a side activity
  • or through umbrella companies

This allows them to test independence with less risk.