About Our Outside IR35 Media Contract Roles
What does a media contractor do?
The media sector generates contract work across a distinctive range of creative, technical, and commercial disciplines, including broadcast production, digital content creation, journalism, advertising technology, audience analytics, rights management, and the technology infrastructure that underpins media distribution and monetisation. Contractors working in media are engaged by broadcasters, streaming platforms, publishing houses, advertising agencies, digital media businesses, and the growing creator economy infrastructure. The project and production-based nature of much media work makes contracting a natural and well-established employment model within the sector.
The skills most valued in media contracting reflect both the creative and technical dimensions of the industry. Production-side contractors, including directors, editors, camera operators, and sound engineers, bring craft skills specific to their medium, whether broadcast television, digital video, podcast, or interactive content. Technology contractors in media need familiarity with the specific infrastructure of media organisations, including broadcast systems, content management and asset management platforms, and the delivery infrastructure for linear and streaming distribution. Commercial and audience analytics professionals need knowledge of the specific metrics and business models of media, including reach, engagement, advertising yield, and subscription economics. Digital media specialists who can navigate the convergence of editorial, advertising technology, and audience data are in particular demand as media businesses adapt to the structural changes in how content is monetised.
What is the market like for media contractors?
Media contracting is a large and established market, structured around the project and production cycles that define how media organisations create and deliver content. The shift from traditional linear media to streaming and digital-first distribution has significantly reshaped contractor demand within the sector, increasing the need for digital production and technology expertise while creating pressure on traditional broadcast roles. The growth of the UK's independent production sector, fuelled by commissions from streaming platforms including Netflix, Amazon, and Apple TV+, has been a significant source of production contractor demand. Advertising technology, audience measurement, and content rights management are growing sources of technical contractor demand as media businesses invest in the infrastructure to compete in a fragmented digital landscape.
What does Outside IR35 mean?
IR35 is UK tax legislation that determines whether a contractor is genuinely self-employed or working in a manner that resembles employment. When a contract is classified as outside IR35, the engagement is treated as a business-to-business arrangement. The contractor operates through their own limited company, invoices for services, and manages their own tax affairs including corporation tax, self-assessment, and VAT where applicable.
Outside IR35 engagements are assessed against three key factors: the degree of control the client exercises over how the work is delivered, whether the contractor has a genuine right to provide a substitute, and whether there is a mutuality of obligation between the parties. Contracts that demonstrate contractor autonomy, project-based delivery, and the absence of ongoing employment obligations are more likely to sit outside IR35. Since April 2021, responsibility for making this determination sits with the end client for medium and large private sector organisations.
On QualityContracts.co.uk, approximately 28% of roles with a stated IR35 status are classified as outside IR35. The proportion varies by sector and role type, with some disciplines seeing a significantly higher or lower share of outside IR35 opportunities. Each listing on this page displays its IR35 status where provided by the hiring organisation.
What media roles are usually Outside IR35?
Media sector contracts sit at around 25% outside IR35 among those with a stated status. Outside IR35 media work concentrates in specific production projects, technology implementations, and strategic advisory roles. The creative and production-oriented end of media, commissioning a specific content series, managing a platform launch, or delivering a digital transformation project, creates engagement boundaries that points toward outside IR35. Broadcasters, publishers, and digital media companies commission this type of project work.
How much do media contractors usually earn when working Outside IR35?
Contract rates for media roles typically range from £300 to £600 per day, depending on the scope of the role, required expertise, and the delivery expectations of the engagement. Rates shown are for outside IR35 engagements and reflect the gross day rate paid to the contractor's limited company before any personal tax obligations.
How many Outside IR35 media vacancies are there on Quality Contracts?
Over the past twelve months, we have tracked over 220 media contract roles across the site. Of the roles currently listed on our site, around one in four are Outside IR35. Data reviewed up to June 2026.