Workers Compensation Insurance
Protecting Your Business From Costly Risks
How To Get The Best Workers’ Compensation Insurance
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Gordon B. Coyle
CEO, The Coyle Group
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What Is Workers’ Compensation Insurance?
Definition & Core Purpose
Workers’ compensation insurance provides statutory benefits to employees who suffer work-related injuries or illnesses. It covers medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, and a portion of lost wages, while also paying death benefits to dependents when an accident is fatal.
For employers, the policy provides legal protection under the “exclusive remedy” doctrine. This means that when coverage is in place, employees generally cannot sue their employer for workplace injuries. Instead, claims are handled through the workers’ compensation insurance system. This protects businesses from devastating liability while ensuring injured employees get timely care.
How it Differs From Standard Business Insurance
Most business insurance policies, like General Liability or a Business Owners Policy (BOP), protect your company against third-party claims (customers, vendors, or the public). Workers compensation insurance is different: it applies strictly to your employees.
Without workers’ compensation, those employee-related claims fall directly on your business. That’s why nearly every state mandates coverage once you have employees.
Why Your Business Needs Workers’ Compensation Insurance
Understanding the scope of workplace injuries helps illustrate why this coverage is essential. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, private employers reported 2.8 million nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses in 2022, up 7.5% from 2021. Even with strong safety programs, workplace incidents remain a persistent risk across all industries.
Risks This Coverage Addresses
If you employ people, workplace injuries and illnesses are a fact of life. Even with safety programs in place, accidents happen, slips, falls, strains, repetitive motion injuries, equipment mishaps, or occupational diseases from long-term exposures.
Workers compensation insurance is designed to address these risks by:

Without workers’ comp, these expenses fall directly on your company, and one severe claim could wipe out years of profit. Learn more about what workers comp covers in different injury scenarios.
Let’s make sure your program protects both your business and your employees
Real-World Claim Examples
Manufacturing Strain Injury
A mid-sized manufacturer had an employee develop chronic back pain after years of heavy lifting. Workers’ comp covered surgery and rehab. Without early reporting and return-to-work planning, the claim escalated, pushing up their EMR and premiums for three years.
Warehouse Forklift Accident
An operator in a distribution center backed into shelving, resulting in a fractured leg. Workers’ comp paid medical bills and partial wages during recovery. The employer avoided a costly lawsuit because the policy shielded them under the exclusive remedy.
Multi-State Remote Worker Gap
A New York tech firm hired developers in Ohio and Washington. Without adding “Other States” coverage, they risked penalties in monopolistic fund states. By restructuring their workers’ comp program, they stayed compliant and prevented a coverage gap that could have cost hundreds of thousands.
These examples underscore the point
Workers compensation insurance isn’t just a legal requirement, it’s a critical financial backstop that protects both your employees and your business.
Key Features of Workers’ Compensation Insurance
Workers’ compensation isn’t a one-size-fits-all policy. To get the most value, and avoid costly surprises, you need to understand the moving parts that drive protection and cost. Moving from the basic need for coverage to the specific features that matter, here are the most important elements to evaluate:
Part A. Statutory Workers’ Compensation Benefits
Part B. Employers’ Liability Coverage
Class Codes & Payroll Basis
Learn how workers compensation class codes are assigned and why accurate classification matters.
Experience Modification Rate (EMR)
Understanding what the workers comp experience mod is and how to improve it can save thousands in annual premiums
Other States & Extraterritorial Coverage
Program Options: Deductibles, Dividends, Retro Plans
USL&H / Maritime Considerations
Broker insight
In my experience, most cost overruns and compliance issues happen not because employers lack coverage, but because they misunderstand class codes, EMR, or multi-state rules. A skilled broker helps you get these right the first time.
How Much Does Workers’ Compensation Insurance Cost?
Workers’ comp premiums aren’t flat rates; you pay based on your payroll, industry, and risk profile. Two businesses of the same size can pay dramatically different premiums depending on their claims history, safety culture, and employee mix. While base rates are often set by each state, they are dramatically modified by each insurer offering coverage in that state.
Cost Drivers
Several factors influence your premium:

Market Trends and Relative Factors
The workers compensation insurance market has been relatively stable in recent years, with loss costs declining in many states thanks to improved workplace safety. However, certain trends are reshaping the landscape:
According to the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), many states have seen ongoing decreases in average rates, with the 2022 private carrier combined ratio remaining low at 84%. However, businesses with poor claims performance still face above-market pricing.
Case-Style Examples
Two Distributors, Same Payroll
Firm A and Firm B both have $10M in payroll. Firm A invests in safety training, logs zero claims, and maintains an EMR of 0.82. Firm B has three lost-time claims in two years and an EMR of 1.25. Result: Firm B’s premium is nearly fifty percent greater than Firm A’s, despite identical size.
Regional Construction Company
A 200-employee contractor had multiple falls-from-height claims. Their EMR rose above 1.3, costing them over $200,000 in additional premiums annually and making them ineligible for certain bids. After implementing a fall-protection program, they brought the EMR down over three years, cutting premiums and regaining competitiveness.
Multi-State Retailer
A retailer with stores in NY, PA, and OH missed enrolling Ohio employees in the state fund. After a claim, they faced fines plus retroactive premium payments. The fix was costly but avoidable with proper structuring.
Discover more strategies on how to prevent workers comp claims before they impact your EMR.
In our experience, two companies of the same size in the same state can see premiums vary widely depending on their risk profile and claims record. The only way to know your true cost is through a tailored quote.
Regulatory and Compliance Considerations
Workers’ compensation is one of the most tightly regulated coverages in the U.S. Every state sets its own rules on who must carry insurance, how claims are handled, and the penalties for failing to comply. Getting it wrong can mean fines, lawsuits, or being shut out of business opportunities.
State & Federal Regulations Impacting Workers’ Comp
Understanding the regulatory environment is crucial for compliance and cost management:

Example
A New York contractor operating without comp was fined over $150,000 and barred from public projects until proof of coverage was submitted.
Common Coverage Gaps and Pitfalls
Even when employers think they’re fully insured, gaps in workers’ comp policies can create expensive surprises. Many of these exposures only come to light after a claim is denied or an audit uncovers a mistake.
Policy Exclusions Buyers Often Miss
Example
A construction firm in Pennsylvania classified subcontractors as independent. After a fall injury, the subcontractor was ruled an employee. The claim went against the employer’s WC policy, and the state billed them for three years of unpaid premiums.
Why Standard Business Insurance Isn’t Enough
General Liability (GL) and Business Owners Policies (BOP) protect you against claims from third parties, not your employees. Employee injury claims fall exclusively under workers’ compensation.
GL covers
Customer slips in your lobby, vendor property damage, or advertising injury.
WC covers
Your employee falling off a ladder, repetitive strain injuries, or an occupational disease.
Gap risk
Without WC, you face uncovered medical bills, wage replacement, and potential lawsuits from injured employees.
Example
An employer assumed their BOP covered workplace injuries. When an employee suffered a severe laceration, the GL carrier denied the claim, leaving the employer fully exposed to medical bills and a lawsuit.
Broker insight: Most business owners underestimate how aggressively states enforce WC rules and how little protection other policies provide. A single misclassified worker or missing endorsement can cost more than a year’s worth of premiums.
How to Choose the Best Workers’ Compensation Program
Buying workers compensation insurance isn’t just about checking a box for compliance. Avoid the common mistake of shopping business insurance based solely on price when workers comp requires strategic program design. The quality of your program can affect your costs, employee satisfaction, and even your ability to win contracts.
Here’s what to focus on:
What to Look for in a Policy

Example: A logistics company with 300 employees partnered with a carrier that provided nurse case managers. Their claims duration dropped 30%, which kept their EMR under 1.0 and saved them six figures annually.
Benefits of Working With The Coyle Group
Workers’ compensation is one of the most significant and misunderstood insurance programs for employers. Most business owners don’t have the time or expertise to track every detail, and relying solely on the carrier often means missed opportunities. The Coyle Group helps you take control of your comp program with strategies that reduce costs and improve compliance.
In our experience, the difference between an average comp program and a well-structured one can add up to hundreds of thousands of dollars over time.
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Questions to Ask Before You Buy
Action step: Before you bind coverage, make sure these questions are answered in writing. A broker who specializes in workers’ comp should be able to walk you through every one.
Questions about Workers Compensation Insurance?
Get the Right Workers Compensation Insurance for Your Business
Every business is different, and so are its workers’ comp needs. Whether you’re a contractor managing crews in multiple states, a manufacturer with high payroll, or a growing professional services firm, the wrong setup can lead to overcharges, compliance issues, and unnecessary risk.
At The Coyle Group, we don’t take a one-size-fits-all approach. We evaluate your operations, workforce, and claims history to design a workers’ comp program that fits your business, not the other way around. From class code reviews to EMR projections and audit prep, our goal is simple: keep your employees protected and your costs under control.

This article was written by Gordon B. Coyle, CPCU, ARM, AMIM, PWCA, CEO of The Coyle Group. With over 40 years of experience helping employers improve safety, control workers’ compensation costs, and navigate complex state regulations, Gordon specializes in building workers’ compensation programs that keep businesses compliant, protected, and financially stable.
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