For many small business owners, an employment contract is not theory. It is cash flow, continuity and risk. It is the difference between flexibility and a long-term commitment you may not be ready for. That is exactly where the, chain rule, comes in. It quietly determines when a series of temporary contracts automatically turns into a permanent one. And if you do not pay attention, the decision is made for you.
In simple terms, the chain rule says that an employee can receive a maximum of three temporary contracts within a period of three years. If you offer a fourth contract, or if the three-year period is exceeded, the contract automatically becomes permanent. No extra paperwork is required. It happens by law. The idea behind it is straightforward: temporary work should not remain temporary forever.
For a micro-entrepreneur with five or six employees, this is not a legal footnote. It directly affects your cost structure and flexibility. Imagine you hire someone on a one-year contract. You extend twice because the collaboration works well but you are not fully certain about long-term demand. Before you know it, you are approaching the three-year limit. At that point, doing nothing is also a decision. If the employment continues beyond the allowed chain, you have created a permanent contract whether you explicitly intended to or not.
There are a few nuances. If there is a break of more than six months between contracts, the chain starts again from zero. Some collective labour agreements, a cao, which is a sector-wide labour agreement, may deviate slightly from the standard rule, but only within legal limits. That means you cannot assume your accountant or payroll system will automatically guard this for you. The responsibility remains with you as employer.
What does this mean in daily business reality? It means you should track contract end dates with the same care as you track invoice due dates. It means you decide in advance, not in the final month, whether you want to move toward permanence or consciously end the collaboration. And it means that workforce planning is not only about workload, but also about timing.
The chain rule is not meant to trap small employers. It is meant to create clarity and security in the labour market. For you, that clarity works both ways. When you understand the timeline, you can use temporary contracts deliberately instead of accidentally. A simple calendar reminder, a quarterly review of contract terms, and a conscious choice before each extension are often enough. In a small business, control rarely comes from complex systems. It comes from knowing the rules and acting a few months earlier than strictly necessary.