Skip to main content

Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio)

Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio)

CONTRATO DE TRABAJO A DOMICILIO

Celebrado conforme a los Artículos 89 a 95 del Código Sustantivo del Trabajo

PRIMERA. — PARTES CONTRATANTES

EMPLEADOR:

Razón Social / Nombre: [Employer Name]

NIT: [Employer NIT]

Domicilio Principal: [Employer Address]

Representante Legal: [Employer Representative]

Cédula de Ciudadanía del Representante: [Representative CC]

TRABAJADOR/A A DOMICILIO:

Nombre Completo: [Worker Name]

Cédula de Ciudadanía / Cédula de Extranjería: [Worker CC]

Dirección de Residencia (Lugar de Trabajo): [Worker Address]

Teléfono: [Worker Phone]

Entre las partes arriba identificadas, quienes en adelante se denominarán EL EMPLEADOR y EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A A DOMICILIO, respectivamente, se celebra el presente Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio conforme a los Artículos 89 a 95 del Código Sustantivo del Trabajo, reconociendo que EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A goza de los mismos derechos y garantías de los demás trabajadores conforme al Artículo 90 del CST.

SEGUNDA. — OBJETO Y DESCRIPCIÓN DEL TRABAJO

Descripción del Trabajo: [Work Description]

Lugar de Ejecución: [Worker Address]

EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A realizará las labores descritas en su domicilio o en el lugar libremente escogido, conforme al Artículo 89 del CST, con los materiales y especificaciones suministrados por EL EMPLEADOR.

TERCERA. — MATERIALES, HERRAMIENTAS Y EQUIPOS

Materiales Suministrados por el Empleador: [Materials Provided]

Herramientas y Equipos: [Tools Arrangement][Tools Description]

Estándares de Calidad: [Quality Standards]

PARÁGRAFO PRIMERO. — EL EMPLEADOR mantendrá un registro de trabajo a domicilio conforme al Artículo 91 del CST, documentando los materiales entregados, las cantidades, fechas de entrega y recepción de producto terminado.

PARÁGRAFO SEGUNDO. — Conforme al Artículo 94 del CST, EL EMPLEADOR no podrá descontar del salario del/la TRABAJADOR/A el valor de materiales dañados durante el proceso de producción, salvo que el daño resulte de negligencia comprobada y se sigan los procedimientos de autorización del Artículo 149 del CST.

CUARTA. — REMUNERACIÓN Y FORMA DE PAGO

Método de Pago: [Payment Method]

Tarifa / Salario: [Unit Rate]

Periodicidad de Pago: [Payment Frequency], mediante consignación en cuenta bancaria o pago directo al/la TRABAJADOR/A, conforme al Artículo 134 del CST.

Cronograma de Entregas: [Delivery Schedule]

PARÁGRAFO. — Conforme al Artículo 93 del CST, la remuneración pactada deberá permitir al/la TRABAJADOR/A obtener al menos el equivalente proporcional del salario mínimo mensual legal vigente (SMLMV) en condiciones normales de trabajo. EL EMPLEADOR emitirá la libreta de salario conforme al Artículo 92 del CST.

QUINTA. — PRESTACIONES SOCIALES

Conforme al Artículo 90 del CST, EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A A DOMICILIO goza de los mismos derechos que los trabajadores que laboran en las instalaciones del empleador. EL EMPLEADOR reconocerá:

a) Cesantías: Un (1) mes de salario por año, consignadas antes del 14 de febrero (Ley 50/1990, Art. 14).

b) Intereses sobre Cesantías: 12% anual, pagados antes del 31 de enero (Art. 249 CST).

c) Prima de Servicios: Un (1) mes de salario por año, en dos cuotas (Art. 306 CST).

d) Vacaciones: Quince (15) días hábiles por año (Art. 186 CST).

e) Dotación: Tres (3) veces al año para salarios hasta dos (2) SMLMV (Art. 230 CST).

SEXTA. — SEGURIDAD SOCIAL

EL EMPLEADOR afiliará al/la TRABAJADOR/A al Sistema General de Seguridad Social Integral (Ley 100 de 1993):

a) Salud: EPS seleccionada: [Worker EPS]. Aportes: empleador 8,5%, trabajador/a 4%.

b) Pensión: AFP / Colpensiones: [Worker AFP]. Aportes: empleador 12%, trabajador/a 4%.

c) Riesgos Laborales: ARL seleccionada por EL EMPLEADOR, con notificación de que el trabajo se realiza en el domicilio del/la TRABAJADOR/A conforme a la Ley 1562 de 2012.

d) Caja de Compensación Familiar: Aporte del 4% a cargo del empleador.

Los aportes se reportarán a través de la Planilla Integrada de Liquidación de Aportes (PILA).

SÉPTIMA. — TERMINACIÓN DEL CONTRATO

El presente contrato podrá terminar por las causas establecidas en los Artículos 61 y 62 del CST. En caso de terminación sin justa causa, EL EMPLEADOR pagará la indemnización del Artículo 64 del CST, modificado por la Ley 789 de 2002 Artículo 28, además de las prestaciones sociales causadas. Al terminar el contrato, EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A deberá devolver los materiales, herramientas y equipos suministrados por EL EMPLEADOR.

OCTAVA. — SEGURIDAD Y SALUD EN EL TRABAJO

EL EMPLEADOR incluirá al/la TRABAJADOR/A en el Sistema de Gestión de Seguridad y Salud en el Trabajo (SG-SST) conforme a la Resolución 0312 de 2019 y el Decreto 1072 de 2015, adaptando los protocolos a las condiciones del trabajo a domicilio. EL EMPLEADOR proporcionará capacitación en manejo seguro de materiales, ergonomía y prevención de riesgos propios de la actividad.

NOVENA. — LEY APLICABLE Y JURISDICCIÓN

El presente contrato se rige por los Artículos 89 a 95 del Código Sustantivo del Trabajo, la Ley 100 de 1993, y el Decreto 1072 de 2015. Las controversias se someterán al Juzgado Laboral del Circuito competente, previa conciliación ante el Ministerio del Trabajo o centro de conciliación autorizado conforme a la Ley 640 de 2001.

FIRMAS

En [Contract City], a los [Contract Date].

EL EMPLEADOR:

[Employer Name]

NIT: [Employer NIT]

Representante Legal: [Employer Representative]

C.C.: [Representative CC]

Firma: _________________________

EL/LA TRABAJADOR/A A DOMICILIO:

[Worker Name]

C.C. / C.E.: [Worker CC]

Firma: _________________________

Declaro haber recibido un ejemplar del presente contrato y la libreta de salario correspondiente.

Firma del/la Trabajador/a: _________________________ Fecha: _________________________

Employer / Legal Representative (Empleador / Representante Legal)

________________

Signature

Home-Based Worker (Trabajador/a a Domicilio)

________________

Signature

Maintained by Vladislav Sergienko, Founder·Template last modified: ·Report an error

What Is a Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio)?

A Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio) is a formal written employment agreement governed by Articles 89 through 95 of the Codigo Sustantivo del Trabajo (CST) — Decreto Ley 2663 de 1950 — under which a worker (trabajador a domicilio) performs assigned production, manufacturing, assembly, or service tasks at their own residence or another location of their choice, using materials and specifications supplied by the employer. Article 89 of the CST defines the trabajador a domicilio as a person who performs work at home or at a site freely chosen by the worker, for an employer, in exchange for remuneration.

The constitutional basis for home-based work protection in Colombia stems from Article 25 of the Constitucion Politica de 1991, which guarantees the right to work under dignified and fair conditions, and Article 53, which establishes fundamental labour principles including equality of opportunity, minimum living wage (salario minimo vital y movil), and stability in employment. Article 90 of the CST establishes the critical legal principle that home-based workers enjoy the same rights and guarantees as workers who perform their duties at the employer's premises — the location of work does not diminish the employment relationship or the worker's entitlement to prestaciones sociales.

Article 91 of the CST mandates that the employer must maintain a registro de trabajo a domicilio (home-based work registry) containing the worker's full identification, the nature of the work performed, the quantity of materials supplied, the agreed piece-rate or unit price for completed work, and the dates of material delivery and finished product collection. The Ministerio del Trabajo (MinTrabajo) may inspect this registry under CST Articles 485 through 487. Article 92 requires the employer to issue a libreta de salario (salary booklet) to each home-based worker, recording each payment made and the corresponding work delivered — the booklet constitutes prima facie evidence of the employment relationship in proceedings before Juzgados Laborales del Circuito.

Article 93 of the CST establishes the method for calculating the home-based worker's salary: the remuneration must be agreed upon in advance and cannot be less than the equivalent of the salario minimo mensual legal vigente (SMLMV) — COP$1.423.500 for 2025 per Decreto 2292 de 2024 — when the worker dedicates full-time effort. Where payment is based on piece-rates (destajo) or production units, the employer must set rates that, under normal working conditions, allow the worker to earn at least the proportional SMLMV. Article 94 provides that the employer may not deduct from the worker's salary the cost of materials damaged during production unless the damage results from proven negligence, and any deductions must follow the authorization procedures established in CST Article 149.

All social security obligations under Ley 100 de 1993 apply to home-based workers. The employer must register the worker with the Sistema General de Seguridad Social Integral: health coverage through an Entidad Promotora de Salud (EPS) with contributions of employer 8.5% and worker 4%; pension through Colpensiones or a private Administradora de Fondos de Pensiones (AFP) with contributions of employer 12% and worker 4%; and occupational risk insurance through an Administradora de Riesgos Laborales (ARL) funded entirely by the employer at rates between 0.348% and 8.7% depending on risk classification under Ley 1562 de 2012 and Decreto 1295 de 1994.

The Decreto Unico Reglamentario del Sector Trabajo — Decreto 1072 de 2015 — consolidates all regulatory provisions applicable to home-based work relationships. Employers must implement a Sistema de Gestion de Seguridad y Salud en el Trabajo (SG-SST) per Resolucion 0312 de 2019 covering home-based workers, adapted to the specific occupational risks of the work performed at the residence. Parafiscal contributions — 4% to Cajas de Compensacion Familiar (CCF), and where applicable 3% to Instituto Colombiano de Bienestar Familiar (ICBF) and 2% to SENA — are calculated on the reported payroll and submitted through the Planilla Integrada de Liquidacion de Aportes (PILA), subject to the exemption under Ley 1607 de 2012 Article 25.

Article 95 of the CST prohibits intermediaries from engaging home-based workers for their own benefit while presenting themselves as the employer — any natural or legal person who supplies materials and receives finished products in exchange for payment is deemed the employer for all legal purposes, regardless of intermediary arrangements. The Sala de Casacion Laboral of the Corte Suprema de Justicia has consistently applied the principio de primacia de la realidad under CST Article 23 to reclassify disguised commercial relationships involving home-based production as employment contracts, triggering retroactive entitlement to all prestaciones sociales.

When Do You Need a Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio)?

A Home-Based Work Contract Colombia is required whenever a Colombian employer engages a worker to perform production, manufacturing, assembly, repair, processing, or service tasks at the worker's own residence or a location chosen by the worker, using materials and specifications supplied by the employer. Articles 89 through 95 of the Codigo Sustantivo del Trabajo establish the legal framework for trabajo a domicilio as a distinct employment modality that grants home-based workers the same rights as those who perform duties at the employer's premises.

The contract is needed when a textile manufacturer, garment producer, food processing company, artisan workshop, or any enterprise in Colombia assigns production tasks to workers who complete them at home. Common industries where home-based work contracts are prevalent include confeccion (garment manufacturing), calzado (footwear production), bisuteria (costume jewelry), alimentos preparados (prepared foods), and ensamblaje de componentes (component assembly). Under CST Article 89, the determining factor is that the worker performs the assigned task at a location of their own choosing rather than at the employer's premises.

A Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio is required when an employer establishes a piece-rate (destajo) payment arrangement with a home-based worker. CST Article 93 mandates that piece-rates must be agreed in advance and must allow the worker to earn at least the proportional SMLMV (COP$1.423.500 for 2025) under normal working conditions. Without a written contract specifying the agreed rates, the employer faces difficulties demonstrating compliance before MinTrabajo inspectors and labour courts.

The document is needed for social security compliance. Under Ley 100 de 1993 and Decreto 1406 de 1999, the employer must register home-based workers in the PILA system and make contributions to EPS, AFP/Colpensiones, ARL, and CCF. The written contract specifying the salary calculation method is the foundational document for determining contribution bases. The Unidad de Gestion Pensional y Parafiscales (UGPP) audits employer compliance with parafiscal contributions and may impose sanctions for underreporting.

The contract is required to comply with the registry obligations under CST Article 91. The employer must maintain a registro de trabajo a domicilio documenting materials supplied, work assignments, and payments made. CST Article 92 requires issuance of a libreta de salario recording each payment. Without a formal written contract establishing the employment relationship, the employer cannot properly maintain these mandatory records.

MinTrabajo has emphasized through administrative guidance that home-based work arrangements must be formalized to prevent labour informality and protect vulnerable workers' social security rights. The International Labour Organization (ILO) Convention 177 on Home Work, while not ratified by Colombia, has influenced MinTrabajo policy guidance on protecting home-based workers' rights under the existing CST framework.

What to Include in Your Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio)

A valid Home-Based Work Contract Colombia under Articles 89 through 95 of the Codigo Sustantivo del Trabajo must contain the following elements to be enforceable and to meet the registry requirements established by MinTrabajo and the Decreto Unico Reglamentario 1072 de 2015.

Identification of Parties: Full legal name, cedula de ciudadania number (for Colombian nationals) or cedula de extranjeria (for foreign residents), and domicile of both the employer (empleador) and home-based worker (trabajador a domicilio). Where the employer is a persona juridica, the company's NIT (Numero de Identificacion Tributaria assigned by the DIAN), Camara de Comercio matricula mercantil number, and identification of the representante legal must be included. Corporate authority must be verified through a Certificado de Existencia y Representacion Legal from the corresponding Camara de Comercio.

Work Location: The address where the worker will perform the assigned tasks — typically the worker's residence under CST Article 89. The contract must acknowledge that the worker freely chooses the work location and that the employer's supervisory rights are exercised through material delivery, quality inspection, and production tracking rather than physical presence at the work site.

Nature of Work and Materials: Detailed description of the production tasks, manufacturing processes, or service activities the worker will perform. The contract must specify the materials, tools, and supplies the employer will provide under CST Article 91, including the type, quantity, and quality of raw materials. Where the worker uses their own tools or equipment, the contract should specify compensation or reimbursement arrangements.

Remuneration Method: CST Article 93 requires the remuneration to be agreed upon in advance. Home-based work contracts typically use one of three payment structures: piece-rate (destajo) based on units produced, fixed monthly salary, or a combination of base salary plus production bonuses. Piece-rates must allow the worker to earn at least the proportional SMLMV (COP$1.423.500 for 2025 per Decreto 2292 de 2024) under normal working conditions. The payment frequency must comply with CST Article 134 — intervals no longer than one month.

Material Delivery and Product Collection Schedule: The contract must specify the schedule for the employer to deliver raw materials to the worker and collect finished products. CST Article 91 requires the employer to maintain records of delivery and collection dates. The contract should address quality inspection procedures, acceptance criteria for finished products, and the process for handling defective or rejected items.

Damage and Material Loss: CST Article 94 provides that the employer may not deduct from the worker's salary for materials damaged during production unless the damage results from proven negligence. The contract must establish the procedure for documenting material damage, the investigation process, and any deduction authorization mechanism compliant with CST Article 149.

Libreta de Salario: CST Article 92 mandates the employer to issue a salary booklet (libreta de salario) recording each payment made and the corresponding work delivered. The contract should reference this obligation and specify the format for the booklet entries.

Prestaciones Sociales: Explicit reference to all mandatory benefits under CST Article 90 — cesantias deposited in the Fondo de Cesantias by 14 February under Ley 50 de 1990 Article 14; intereses sobre cesantias at 12% annual paid by 31 January under CST Article 249; prima de servicios in two instalments under CST Article 306; vacaciones of 15 business days per year under CST Article 186; and dotacion three times yearly for workers earning up to two SMLMV under CST Article 230. All calculations use the agreed salary base.

Social Security Affiliation: Registration with the Sistema General de Seguridad Social Integral under Ley 100 de 1993 — EPS (employer 8.5%, worker 4%), AFP/Colpensiones (employer 12%, worker 4%), and ARL (employer-funded). The ARL must be notified that the worker performs duties at home to adapt occupational risk assessments under Ley 1562 de 2012. Contributions are reported through the PILA system.

Occupational Health and Safety: The employer must include the home-based worker in the SG-SST under Resolucion 0312 de 2019 and Decreto 1072 de 2015. The contract should specify training requirements for safe handling of materials, ergonomic guidelines for the home workspace, and emergency procedures. Where the work involves hazardous substances — chemicals, solvents, adhesives — the employer must provide personal protective equipment and compliance training per the Globally Harmonized System (GHS) adopted by Colombia under Decreto 1496 de 2018.

Forms-legal.com provides this Home-Based Work Contract Colombia template as a practical starting point for formalizing the trabajo a domicilio relationship. Each contract should be reviewed by a licensed abogado laboralista to confirm compliance with sector-specific regulations, collective bargaining agreements, and the particular occupational health requirements of the assigned tasks. MinTrabajo, the UGPP, and the DIAN each maintain independent audit authority over employer compliance with home-based work obligations.

Cite this page

Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:

APA

Forms Legal. (2026). Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio) (Colombia) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/colombia/employment/contracts/home-based-work-contract-colombia

MLA

"Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio) (Colombia)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/colombia/employment/contracts/home-based-work-contract-colombia.

BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-home-based-work-contract-colombia,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Home-Based Work Contract Colombia (Contrato de Trabajo a Domicilio) (Colombia)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/colombia/employment/contracts/home-based-work-contract-colombia}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

Also available for these jurisdictions:

Frequently Asked Questions

Statute-referenced template — Template last modified June 2026

This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer

Found an error? Let us know

Related Documents

You may also find these documents useful:

Contrato de Trabajo a Término Indefinido Colombia — CST Art. 45

Contrato de Trabajo a Término Indefinido para Colombia conforme al artículo 45 del Código Sustantivo del Trabajo (CST), que establece una relación laboral sin fecha de terminación predeterminada, con cobertura obligatoria de EPS, aportes a AFP o Colpensiones, seguro ARL, depósitos de cesantías y todas las prestaciones sociales del derecho laboral colombiano.

Contrato de Prestación de Servicios Colombia — CC Arts. 2063-2069

Modelo de Contrato de Prestación de Servicios para Colombia conforme al Código Civil artículos 2063 a 2069 y el Código de Comercio, que establece condiciones para servicios independientes sin subordinación, con cláusulas sobre honorarios, retención en la fuente, seguridad social PILA y propiedad intelectual.

Carta de Terminación Laboral Colombia

Carta de Terminación Laboral para Colombia regulada por los artículos 61 a 66 del Código Sustantivo del Trabajo, que formaliza la decisión del empleador o del trabajador de dar por terminada la relación laboral con el debido preaviso y los fundamentos legales correspondientes.

Acuerdo de Confidencialidad del Empleado Colombia

Acuerdo de Confidencialidad del Empleado para Colombia conforme al Artículo 58 numeral 8 del Código Sustantivo del Trabajo (CST) y el Artículo 1602 del Código Civil, que establece obligaciones vinculantes de reserva sobre información propietaria, secretos empresariales y datos comerciales confidenciales durante y después de la relación laboral, con acciones bajo la Ley 256 de 1996 (competencia desleal) y la Decisión 486 de 2000 de la Comunidad Andina.

Acuerdo de Comisión de Ventas Colombia

Un Acuerdo de Comisión de Ventas para Colombia regido por los Artículos 1287 a 1311 del Código de Comercio (comisión mercantil), que establece las condiciones bajo las cuales el comitente contrata a un comisionista para negociar o ejecutar ventas, especificando tasas, metodología de cálculo, plazos de pago, exclusividad y obligaciones de rendición de cuentas.