How to Reduce Workers Comp Costs

10 proven strategies that lower your premium — and keep it down year after year.

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Why Workers Comp Costs So Much — and What You Can Do

Workers compensation premiums are driven by three things: your class code rate (the risk of your type of work), your payroll (your exposure), and your experience modifier (your actual claims history vs. expectations). You can't easily change your class code or payroll, but your experience modifier is entirely within your control over time — and it's the most powerful lever you have.

EMR math: If your base premium is $50,000/year and your EMR drops from 1.20 to 0.90, your premium drops to $37,500 — saving $12,500 per year. That's the same $12,500 saved every single year going forward.

1

Implement a Formal Written Safety Program

A documented safety program is the foundation of everything else. It demonstrates your commitment to safety, satisfies OSHA requirements, and creates the framework for training and accountability. Many states offer premium discounts (5–10%) simply for having a qualifying written safety program in place.

Impact: 5–10% premium discount + fewer claims
2

Create a Return-to-Work Program

A return-to-work (RTW) program gets injured employees back on the job in modified duty as soon as medically cleared. This is the single most effective way to reduce the cost of claims that do occur — studies show RTW programs reduce total claim costs by 30–50%. Shorter claims = lower EMR impact.

Impact: 30–50% reduction in claim severity
3

Report Claims Immediately

Delayed claim reporting dramatically increases costs — studies show claims reported within 1 week cost significantly less than those reported after 2+ weeks. Establish a clear protocol: any injury gets reported to the insurer same day. Early intervention leads to faster treatment and lower total costs.

Impact: 20–40% lower claim costs
4

Verify Your Class Code Classifications

Many businesses are misclassified — often at a higher rate than they should be. Request a classification audit from your insurer or broker. Make sure clerical and supervisory employees are coded separately (code 8810 at $0.20–$0.60/$100) rather than lumped in with field workers.

Impact: Can reduce premium by 10–30%
5

Shop Your Policy at Renewal

Workers comp rates vary significantly between insurers even for identical risks. Get quotes from at least 3 carriers at every renewal. A specialized broker who writes a lot of policies in your industry can often access markets and discounts that a generalist can't.

Impact: $500–$5,000+ per year
6

Conduct Pre-Employment Drug Testing

Employees who are impaired on the job are significantly more likely to be injured. A documented drug-free workplace program qualifies for premium discounts in most states (typically 5–7.5%) and reduces claims by reducing impairment-related accidents.

Impact: 5–7.5% discount in most states
7

Conduct Regular Safety Training

Document all safety training with sign-in sheets, topics covered, and dates. Focus training on your highest-risk activities — falls, strains, struck-by incidents, and equipment operation cover the majority of injuries in most trades. Monthly toolbox talks take 10 minutes and create a paper trail that demonstrates your safety culture.

Impact: Reduced frequency of claims over time
8

Manage Open Claims Actively

Stay involved in open claims — don't just hand them to the insurer and forget. Check in on injured employees, stay in contact with their treating physicians (within legal limits), and push for appropriate treatment timelines. Lingering claims are the biggest driver of high EMRs.

Impact: Prevents claims from escalating
9

Consider a Higher Deductible Policy

If your business has good cash flow and a strong safety record, a large-deductible policy can significantly reduce your premium. You pay claims up to the deductible (often $1,000–$100,000 per claim) and the insurer handles the rest. This works best for businesses with low claim frequency.

Impact: 10–25% premium reduction
10

Require Certificates of Insurance from All Subs

Subcontractors without their own workers comp become your liability — their injuries get charged to your policy and raise your EMR. Require current certificates of insurance from every subcontractor before work begins, and track renewals. This eliminates a significant hidden cost for many contractors.

Impact: Eliminates uninsured sub exposure

Calculate Your Workers Comp Cost

Use our free calculator to estimate what you should be paying based on your payroll and classification.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a claim affect my EMR?
Workers comp claims affect your experience modifier for 3 years. The most recent year's claims are excluded from the EMR calculation (used in next year's calculation), so the impact window is years 2, 3, and 4 after the claim year. A claim today affects your EMR — and premium — for 3 renewal cycles.
What EMR is considered good?
An EMR of 1.0 is the industry average. Anything below 1.0 is better than average — 0.80 or below is considered excellent. Many large general contractors require subcontractors to have an EMR below 1.0 or even 0.90 to bid on projects, making your modifier a business qualification issue as well as a cost issue.
Can I dispute my experience modifier?
Yes. Errors in EMR calculations are more common than most businesses realize — misapplied claim data, incorrect payroll figures, and improperly included claims (subcontractor injuries, claims outside the experience period) can all inflate your modifier. A workers comp audit or consultant can review your mod worksheet and file corrections if errors are found.