As a California business owner, you have a lot of responsibilities. As such, receiving a notification of an EDD (Employment Development Department) audit is frustrating, but you shouldn’t ignore it. If you need help, read this guide on what you should do if you get an EDD audit.
The good news is that an EDD audit does not automatically mean you did anything intentional or fraudulent. Often, the state is trying to verify payroll reporting, worker classification, and tax compliance. Still, the consequences can become serious very quickly if you ignore the notice, send incomplete records, or respond without a plan. The EDD conducts payroll tax audits to verify compliance with California law, confirm proper worker classification, and ensure accurate reporting of wages and payroll taxes.
What Is an EDD Audit?
The California Unemployment Insurance Code (CUIC) and the Government Code authorize the Employment Development Department (EDD) to conduct payroll tax audits of businesses operating in California. The payroll tax audit checks compliance with the CUIC, ensures workers are properly classified. They confirms that payments to employees are accurately reported, and protects workers’ rights to receive benefits. This audit determines if the company classified a worker as an independent contractor instead of an employee.
However, other situations can trigger an audit. Such as paying workers off the payroll, failing to distribute 1099s to individuals who work as contractors, or business owners paying themselves below their market value. Ultimately, if the EDD has suspicion of misclassifications and payroll issues, they will launch an investigation.
In practical terms, the EDD is looking at whether your business properly reported wages, paid payroll taxes, and classified workers correctly. Audits often focus on the difference between employees and independent contractors, the accuracy of payroll filings. Whether the business maintained adequate records. The EDD’s payroll tax materials also point employers back to the official audit process sheet as the primary explanation of what to expect.
Why businesses get audited
Not every audit starts because the EDD believes a business committed wrongdoing. Some audits are verification-based, while others are triggered by red flags such as worker classification disputes, inconsistent wage reporting, or issues raised by former workers. Pershing Square Law’s discussion of what to expect during an EDD audit also notes that common triggers can include unemployment claims, payroll inconsistencies, and cross-agency discrepancies.
That is why the smartest approach is to treat the audit as both a legal and financial matter. Even a seemingly small error can turn into an assessment for back taxes, interest, and penalties if it affects multiple workers or multiple quarters.
Contact an EDD Lawyer
One of the biggest mistakes employers make is assuming an EDD audit is just an administrative inconvenience. In reality, the outcome can affect your company’s finances, your compliance history, and, in some cases, your personal liability. Pershing Square Law’s EDD audit page points out that assessments can involve unpaid payroll taxes, income tax, and penalties, and that employers usually have a limited window to challenge the result before it becomes final.
That is why early legal guidance matters. An attorney can help you understand what the auditor is really asking for, identify weak spots before documents are produced. And keep the response focused and organized. If the issue involves independent contractor classification, missing payroll records, or an expanded audit scope, legal counsel becomes even more valuable.
When to involve counsel
You should strongly consider speaking with counsel as soon as you receive the audit notice, especially if the audit mentions worker classification, suspected underreporting, or multiple years of records. If you are already in that position, Pershing Square Law’s page about how to manage an EDD payroll tax audit is a natural starting point for understanding the defense side of the process.
You should also know that the EDD provides official contact options for payroll tax inquiries, including the Taxpayer Assistance Center and local employment tax offices. If you need to verify process questions, deadlines, or account details, the agency’s Contact Payroll Taxes page is one of the most useful official resources to keep on hand.
What Information To Gather
The most common documents the EDD requests are payroll records, bank statements, federal income tax returns, and employee registers. It’s also best to provide wage information for specific time frames. When the EDD receives your information, the audit begins. It’s also important to note that the EDD may request additional records and documents.
Start with core payroll and tax records
Begin with the documents that show how your business paid workers and reported those payments to the state. That usually includes payroll registers, wage reports, quarterly returns, tax deposit records, employee earning statements, bank statements tied to payroll, check registers, and bookkeeping records such as general ledgers.
The EDD’s Employment Tax Audit Process (DE 231TA) makes clear that an auditor may review payroll records and other documents necessary to determine payments made to workers, while the agency’s e-Services for Business platform is also where employers file, adjust, and print returns and reports and manage their payroll tax activities.
You should also pull copies of any forms already filed through EDD, including wage reports and deposit confirmations. The EDD’s Forms and Publications page and the California Employer’s Guide (DE 44) are especially useful. Because they bring together the main filing, reporting, and payroll compliance materials an employer may need to cross-check during an audit.
Preserve wage statements and payroll detail
If the article discusses payroll recordkeeping in more detail, it makes sense to mention California Labor Code section 226, which governs itemized wage statements. While an EDD audit is not the same as a wage-and-hour lawsuit. Clear wage statements and payroll detail can help support the employer’s position and reduce confusion about hours, wages, deductions, and payment dates.
In practical terms, that means keeping the following:
- pay stubs or wage statements,
- timesheets or time-tracking reports,
- records of bonuses, commissions, reimbursements, or noncash compensation,
- employee onboarding and termination records, and
- Any payroll system reports that explain how figures were calculated.
Gather worker classification documents
Classification is often one of the most important issues in an EDD audit. If your business paid any workers as independent contractors, consultants, or freelancers, gather every document that shows the nature of that relationship. That includes independent contractor agreements, invoices, proof of separate business operations, email communications, scopes of work, and payment records. The EDD’s audit process materials specifically note that when classification is at issue. The auditor may examine agreements, invoices, corporate records, and other documents related to the services performed.
The California Employer’s Guide (DE 44) also reminds employers that worker status may be analyzed under the ABC test or the Borello test, depending on the circumstances. That is why classification documents should not only exist but also match the real working relationship.If your business labels a worker as an independent contractor on paper but manages that worker like an employee in practice, the EDD may still classify the worker as an employee for payroll tax purposes.
Look for consistency across all records
One of the most common problems in an audit is inconsistency. Your payroll reports, tax filings, contracts, bank records, and internal bookkeeping should not contradict one another. For example, if your books show recurring payments to a “contractor,” but that person worked on a fixed schedule under company supervision, the auditor may view that as evidence of misclassification. That is why it helps to review the records as a whole before producing them.
A well-prepared audit file should clearly show who performed the work, how the business paid them. And explain how the business reported those payments and why it classified the worker as an employee or independent contractor.
Use official EDD records to verify what was filed
Before submitting anything, compare your internal records against what appears in your EDD account. Through the state’s e-Services for Business, employers can review account activity, filed reports, and payments, which can help catch discrepancies before the audit moves further. It is also worth reviewing the EDD’s forms and publications page to confirm you are working from the correct forms and guidance.
Build a clean record before responding
The goal is not to overwhelm the auditor with paper. The goal is to create a clean, organized record that supports your reporting and classification decisions. A well-prepared employer should be able to produce payroll records, worker agreements, tax filings, and supporting financial documents in a way that is easy to follow. When those records are complete and internally consistent. The business is in a much stronger position to answer questions and push back on incorrect assumptions.
Potential Penalties
Depending on the nature of your EDD audit, you may face financial penalties. For instance, paying back a percentage of unpaid taxes or paying a fine for each unreported employee can happen. The potential penalties and fines can cause a financial strain on businesses. And that’s why it’s important to have a lawyer review your audit and relevant documents. The EDD’s current Penalty Reference Chart (DE 231EP) shows that these penalties are not theoretical; they are tied to specific filing, payment, reporting, and assessment failures.
Common penalty categories employers may face
One of the most common penalties is the 15% underpayment or late payment penalty under CUIC section 1112(a), which applies when contributions are not paid by the due date. The same chart also lists a 15% payment noncompliance penalty for failing to remit payments electronically when required and a $50 per return penalty for failing to file returns electronically under section 1112.1(a).
If the issue goes beyond a simple late payment, the numbers can rise further. The EDD lists a 15% late report penalty for failure to file reports within 60 days of the due date when amounts were not paid on time; a $20 per wage item penalty for failure to file wage reports after written demand; and a 15% assessment penalty under section 1126 for failure to file required returns or reports.
The most serious exposure appears when the EDD concludes the employer acted negligently, intentionally disregarded the law, or engaged in fraud or evasion. Under the current chart, section 1127 imposes a 15% assessment penalty for deficient returns or reports filed negligently or in intentional disregard of the law, while section 1128(a) adds a 50% fraud or intent-to-evade penalty on assessed contributions. In especially serious concealment situations, the chart also lists a 100% money exchange penalty tied to concealed wages.
If You Disagree With the Final Report
After the audit, the EDD will present a final report that states whether you’re responsible for paying fines and penalties or not. If you disagree with the report, you can file an appeal and submit additional evidence in support of your position. In addition, your lawyer can represent you in your appeal hearing. If you need help navigating the complicated EDD audit process, the experts at Pershing Square Law Firm are here for you. Find out more about our services by contacting us today.