Do
I need workers compensation insurance?
Employers
have a legal responsibility to their employees to make the
workplace safe. However, accidents happen even when every
reasonable safety measure has been taken.
To protect employers from lawsuits resulting from workplace
accidents and to provide medical care and compensation for
lost income to employees hurt in workplace accidents, in
almost every state, businesses are required to buy workers
compensation insurance. Workers compensation insurance covers
workers injured on the job, whether they're hurt on the
workplace premises or elsewhere, or in auto accidents while on
business. It also covers work-related illnesses.
Workers compensation provides payments to injured workers,
without regard to who was at fault in the accident, for time
lost from work and for medical and rehabilitation services. It
also provides death benefits to surviving spouses and
dependents.
Each state has different laws governing the amount and
duration of lost income benefits, the provision of medical and
rehabilitation services and how the system is administered.
For example, in most states there are regulations that cover
whether the worker or employer can choose the doctor who
treats the injuries and how disputes about benefits are
resolved.
Workers compensation insurance must be bought as a separate
policy. Although in-home business and business-owners policies
(BOPs) are sold as package policies, they don't include
coverage for workers' injuries.