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Virginia Workers Compensation: What the Insurance Company Already Knows

The guide insurance adjusters hope you never read. How the claims system actually works — the deadlines, the benefits, the insurer tactics, and the mistakes that cost workers their cases before an attorney is ever involved.

Corey Pollard — Virginia Workers’ Compensation Attorney, Richmond VA

Corey Pollard — former insurance defense
attorney, now representing injured workers

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Former Defense Attorney
Knows the other side’s playbook

About your attorney
Corey Pollard
Virginia Workers’ Compensation Trial Attorney  ·  Richmond, VA

Before I represented injured workers, I spent years defending insurance companies. I know how adjusters are trained to handle claims, which arguments they expect you to miss, and which records they pull before your first call. That background shapes how I build cases — and why the outcomes on this firm’s results page look different from firms that only know one side of this system.

Recognition
Super Lawyers® & Best Lawyers in America®
Recovered
$100M+ for injured Virginians
Experience
15+ years workers’ comp trial practice
Education
William & Mary & Richmond Law School
(804) 251-1620 →


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Key Takeaways
What It Is

A no-fault system — you do not have to prove your employer was negligent, and you can still qualify even if your own mistake caused the injury. Governed by Title 65.2 of the Virginia Code and administered by the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission.

Who Qualifies

Employees who suffer accidental injuries while performing job duties, or who develop occupational diseases. If the injury arose out of and in the course of employment, you likely have a claim.

Deadlines

Report within 30 days (Va. Code § 65.2-600). File a claim with the Commission within 2 years (Va. Code § 65.2-601). Miss either and you may lose your right to benefits permanently.

Benefits

Lifetime medical care, wage replacement at 66⅔% of your pre-injury average weekly wage, permanent impairment compensation, death benefits, and lump-sum settlements.

Common Problems

Insurers deny claims by blaming pre-existing conditions, scheduling IMEs with defense-friendly doctors, and conducting surveillance. These tactics are predictable — see Common Defenses.

Cost to You

Nothing unless we recover. Attorney fees are paid from your settlement — not out of pocket, not upfront. There is no fee to file a claim with the Commission.

Next Step

Don’t sign anything from the insurer before you understand your rights. Call (804) 251-1620 for a free consultation. Leave a Message 24/7.

Injured at work in Virginia? Talk to a former insurance defense attorney who knows the other side’s playbook.

Call (804) 251-1620 — Free Consultation
Leave a Message 24/7. No fee unless we recover.

Corey Pollard, Virginia Workers' Compensation Attorney

About This Guide

Written by Corey Pollard — a Virginia workers’ compensation trial attorney with 15+ years of experience, including appellate victories that changed Virginia law. Before representing injured workers, I spent years on the insurance defense side. This guide explains the system the way the adjuster fighting your claim understands it — not the way a textbook describes it.

Ready to talk about your claim → (804) 251-1620 — free, leave a message 24/7

Last reviewed: March 2026  |  Reflects current Virginia law and 2025–2026 VWCC weekly maximum rates.

How Virginia Workers’ Compensation Works

You can file a workers’ comp claim even if the accident was your fault. Virginia’s system is no-fault — the only questions are whether you suffered an injury by accident arising out of and in the course of employment, and whether you reported it and filed on time.

The Foundation
What is workers’ compensation in Virginia?

Workers’ compensation is a no-fault insurance system that pays medical bills and replaces lost wages when an employee is injured on the job. You do not have to prove your employer was negligent. Benefits governed by the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission include lifetime medical care, wage replacement at 66⅔% of your pre-injury pay (up to $1,463.10/week for injuries on or after July 1, 2025), permanent impairment compensation, and lump-sum settlements.

The Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission administers all claims. It receives approximately 35,000 new claims per year and maintains hearing offices in Richmond, Roanoke, Norfolk, and Manassas. Your case is typically heard in the office closest to where the injury occurred. In hearings before the Commission, I’ve watched adjusters and defense attorneys use procedural technicalities to derail claims that should have been straightforward — which is why understanding this process matters before you’re sitting in a hearing room.

The claims process follows these steps:

  1. 1
    You are injured at work or diagnosed with a work-related illness.
  2. 2
    Report the injury to your employer within 30 days — in writing. A text or email to your supervisor counts. Here’s a sample accident report letter.
  3. 3
    The employer or insurer reports the incident to the Commission. What the Commission does →
  4. 4
    File your own claim with the VWCC. Never rely on your employer to do it. Your employer’s incident report does not protect you. Only your claim does. How to file →
  5. 5
    The insurer accepts, denies, or delays for “investigation.”
  6. 6
    If accepted — you receive an Award Agreement that locks in your benefits.
  7. 7
    If denied — the Commission dockets your case for a hearing.
  8. 8
    Both sides exchange evidence through discovery.
  9. 9
    Trial before a deputy commissioner.
  10. 10
    The deputy commissioner issues a written decision.
  11. 11
    Either side can appeal — first to the Full Commission, then to the Court of Appeals of Virginia.

On paper it looks like eleven steps. In practice, most of the decisions that determine whether you win or lose happen in the first four — and they happen before any attorney is involved.

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Deadlines You Cannot Miss

Miss a deadline, and even the strongest case is gone. Virginia courts enforce these strictly. A cooperative employer cannot waive them.

The Short Answer
How long do I have to file a workers’ comp claim in Virginia?

You must report your injury to your employer within 30 days under Va. Code § 65.2-600, and file a claim with the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission within 2 years under Va. Code § 65.2-601. Your employer’s incident report does not count as filing a claim — you must file separately. Missing either deadline can permanently bar your case.

30 daysReport your injury to your employer (Va. Code § 65.2-600). In writing. A text or email to your supervisor counts. A verbal report with no documentation often doesn’t. Use this sample report letter.

2 yearsFile a claim with the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission (Va. Code § 65.2-601). Your employer’s incident report does not satisfy this requirement. You must file separately.

Occupational diseases follow different rules. Hearing loss, repetitive stress injuries, and diseases caused by workplace exposure have filing windows that may differ from the standard two-year period — sometimes shorter. Don’t assume the same deadline applies. See the complete statute of limitations guide before you do anything else.

Missed a deadline? You may still have options →

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Workers’ Compensation Benefits in Virginia

A successful claim provides five categories of benefits. Understanding all five before the insurer makes its first offer is the difference between a fair settlement and one you’ll regret.

Quick Answer
How much does workers’ comp pay in Virginia?

Virginia workers’ comp pays 66⅔% of your pre-injury average weekly wage, up to a state maximum of $1,463.10 per week for injuries on or after July 1, 2025. You also receive lifetime medical care with no co-pays, no deductibles, and no time limits. Permanent impairment is compensated separately based on your body part and impairment rating. The average Virginia workers’ comp settlement is approximately $52,400, but serious injury cases regularly exceed $200,000.

Lifetime Medical Care

Your employer pays for all reasonable and necessary medical treatment related to your work injury — for life. No co-pays. No deductibles. No time limits. This includes doctor visits, surgery, physical therapy, prescription medication (including medical marijuana), diagnostic imaging, in-home nursing care, and mileage to appointments.

This benefit is often worth more than your cash settlement. For someone with a surgical injury who will need ongoing treatment, the lifetime medical award can represent $200,000 or more in future value. Most workers only see the settlement check number and don’t calculate what they’re trading away. Don’t close your medical without understanding what it’s worth. Full medical benefits guide →

I’ve had insurers attempt to terminate medical care by arguing a worker reached MMI with no need for further treatment — even when that worker was still taking prescription pain medication daily. Lifetime medical is only ironclad if you’ve protected it with an Award Agreement. Without one, it’s subject to dispute.

Wage Replacement

If you can’t work at all, temporary total disability (TTD) pays at the rates below. If you return to work at reduced pay because of your restrictions, temporary partial disability (TPD) pays 66⅔% of the wage difference.

66%
of pre-injury average
weekly wage
$1,463.10
state maximum per week
(injuries on/after July 1, 2025)
500
weeks of wage replacement
for most injuries (9.6 years)

Example: If your average weekly wage before the injury was $1,200, your TTD benefit is $800/week. If you return to a light-duty job earning $600/week, TPD pays 66⅔% of the $600 difference — $400/week.

Catastrophic injuries qualifying for permanent total disability — total paralysis, severe traumatic brain injury, or loss of two or more limbs — receive lifetime wage replacement with no cap. Insurers routinely dispute the average weekly wage calculation, especially for workers who averaged overtime, tips, or income from multiple jobs. I’ve seen AWW disputes alone shift a settlement by $40,000 or more. How to calculate and maximize your AWW →

Permanent Impairment Compensation

Once you reach maximum medical improvement (MMI), a doctor assigns an impairment rating — a percentage representing the permanent loss of function in the injured body part. Permanent partial disability (PPD) is calculated as:

Your compensation rate × weeks assigned to your body part × your impairment percentage = PPD payout.

Example: A rotator cuff surgery with a 15% impairment rating. The arm is assigned 200 weeks. At an $800/week compensation rate: $800 × 200 × 0.15 = $24,000 in PPD. At a 20% rating, that same calculation produces $32,000 — an $8,000 difference from a single percentage point. The insurer’s IME doctor will fight to keep that number as low as possible. PPD calculator and body part values →

Death Benefits

A surviving spouse with dependent children can receive two-thirds of the deceased worker’s average weekly wage for up to 500 weeks. What most families don’t anticipate is the insurer disputing causation — not dependency, but whether the work injury actually caused the death. I’ve had carriers deny death claims on the grounds that an underlying health condition was the proximate cause. Proving otherwise requires the same medical evidence you’d build for a living claimant. Death benefits guide →

Settlements

Before You Settle
How long does a Virginia workers’ comp settlement take?

Virginia workers’ comp settlements typically take 12 to 36 months from injury to resolution for cases involving surgery or significant permanent impairment. Minor injury claims that don’t require surgery often resolve in 6 to 12 months. The timeline is driven primarily by when you reach maximum medical improvement (MMI) — settlement negotiations before MMI almost always undervalue your claim because the full extent of permanent impairment is not yet known.

The average Virginia workers’ comp settlement is approximately $52,400 based on VWCC data — but serious injury cases regularly exceed $200,000, and catastrophic injuries can exceed $1 million. That average includes cases resolved in weeks with minor injuries. The factors that push your case toward $200,000 rather than $52,000 are specific to injury type, pre-injury wage, age, and whether surgery is in the picture.

What the insurer hopes you calculate
Settlement check numberThe offer on the table, nothing else
AWW at base pay onlyOvertime, tips, and second-job income excluded
IME impairment ratingDefense doctor’s number, minimized at examination
Medical closedNo future care after settlement
What a complete case includes
Settlement + lifetime medical valueOften $200K+ in future care for surgical injuries
AWW including all incomeDisputes alone can shift settlement by $40K+
Contested impairment ratingEach percentage point = thousands of dollars in PPD
Future care protected or pricedMedicare Set-Aside negotiated where applicable

To see how settlement values play out in real Virginia cases — including several exceeding $1 million — see Real Results for Virginia Workers below.

All 7 Virginia workers’ comp benefits explained in detail →

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Mistakes That Destroy Claims

Most claims aren’t lost at trial. They’re lost in the first 30 days — before an attorney is ever involved. In my years handling cases before deputy commissioners at the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission, I’ve seen each of these mistakes cost workers their benefits:

Not reporting in writing. A verbal report to your supervisor is not enough. If there’s no written record, the insurer will argue the injury never happened at work — or that the mechanism was different from what you later describe. A text to your supervisor sent the same day takes 30 seconds and removes that entire line of attack.

Missing the two-year filing deadline. Your employer’s incident report does not file your claim. You must file separately with the Commission. Statute of limitations guide →

Treating with an unauthorized doctor. Virginia requires you to treat within the employer’s panel of physicians. Going outside the panel without authorization can void your medical benefits. The most common version of this mistake isn’t deliberate: workers instinctively call their own orthopedist in the first 24 hours before anyone explains the panel requirement. What makes a valid panel →

Giving a recorded statement without legal advice. The adjuster’s call is not a wellness check. Before they call you, they’ve already reviewed the incident report and are building a narrative. A registered nurse’s insurer denied her back injury — suffered while transferring a patient — by arguing the condition was degenerative. The recorded statement is where adjusters gather the language they later use to support that argument: inconsistencies between what you say on the call and what appears in old medical records.


We countered with an IME from a spine specialist who confirmed the work injury caused her L4–L5 herniation. Their first offer was $52,000. She settled for $215,000 plus a Medicare Set-Aside for future medical care.

$52,000
First offer

$215,000
Final settlement

+ Medicare Set-Aside for future medical care. Back injury disputed as “degenerative.” Defense IME challenged. Award confirmed work-related L4–L5 herniation.

Accepting light duty without documented restrictions. Sedgwick pushed an Amazon picker at the RIC2 fulfillment center in Chester back to modified duty before he was medically cleared from a rotator cuff tear, then cut off his TTD benefits when he couldn’t perform the work. That sequence — push to light duty, remove restrictions, terminate wage benefits — is standard operating procedure at several TPAs. Written restrictions from your doctor at every visit are your documentation to fight it.

Signing an agreement without understanding its scope. Some agreements settle only part of your claim. Others close it permanently. The language matters more than the number on the first offer. If you’ve received an offer → Is it fair?

Worried you’ve already made a mistake? Call (804) 251-1620 — consultations are free, leave a message 24/7.

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How Insurance Companies Fight Virginia Workers’ Comp Claims

Insurance companies deny claims in predictable ways. Once you know the playbook, you can prepare before the first adjuster call. Here are the tactics I see most from adjusters at Sedgwick, Gallagher Bassett, The Hartford, and Travelers:

Quick Answer
Can workers’ comp deny my claim in Virginia?

Yes. Virginia insurers deny claims frequently using predictable tactics: blaming pre-existing conditions, scheduling biased IMEs, using surveillance to misrepresent your abilities, pressuring early lowball settlements, and deploying nurse case managers to influence your medical care. A denial is not the end — it triggers a hearing before a deputy commissioner at the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission.

Blaming pre-existing conditions. The insurer pulls your old medical records, finds a prior back complaint from years ago, and argues your current symptoms are degenerative — not work-related. Under Virginia law, aggravation of a pre-existing condition is still compensable. But this defense works against unrepresented workers who don’t know how to counter it.

Scheduling IMEs with defense-friendly doctors. The insurer picks and pays the doctor. The doctor spends 15–30 minutes with you and writes a report disagreeing with months of treatment from your physician. The IME is not independent — and challenging it requires knowing which questions to ask and which records to submit. I’ve cross-examined these defense-hired doctors at Commission hearings dozens of times. Their opinions frequently don’t survive direct questioning about what they didn’t review.

Using surveillance to misrepresent your abilities. A private investigator films you carrying a bag of groceries from your car. At hearing, the insurer presents that 30-second clip as proof you can work. What they don’t show: the 23 hours and 59 minutes you spent in pain afterward. Credibility attacks based on surveillance are common — and beatable with the right preparation.

Pressuring early settlements before you understand what your claim is worth. These early offers rarely account for future surgery, permanent impairment, or the lifetime value of your medical benefits.

Deploying nurse case managers to control your care. The nurse works for the insurer, not you. She can’t attend your doctor appointments without your consent and can’t override your doctor’s treatment plan — but many injured workers don’t know that.

Bottom Line
Do I need a lawyer for workers’ compensation in Virginia?

You are not required to hire an attorney, but insurers routinely deny valid claims, dispute average weekly wage calculations, schedule biased IMEs, and use procedural technicalities to reduce or eliminate benefits. Studies consistently show represented workers receive significantly higher settlements. Virginia workers’ comp attorneys charge no upfront fees — the fee is paid from your settlement or award only if you recover.

Recognized how the insurer is handling your claim?

Call (804) 251-1620 — leave a message 24/7. Free consultation. I’ll tell you what their playbook looks like for your specific injury type and what to do next. You can also submit your information online and I’ll respond within hours.

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Common Work Injuries Covered by Virginia Workers’ Comp

Virginia workers’ compensation covers any injury by accident arising out of and in the course of employment, as well as occupational diseases caused by workplace conditions. The most common injuries I handle — and the ones insurers fight hardest — include:

Quick Answer
Does workers’ comp cover pre-existing conditions in Virginia?

Yes. Under Virginia law, a work injury that aggravates, accelerates, or combines with a pre-existing condition is still fully compensable. You do not need a clean medical history. Insurers routinely deny these claims by arguing that symptoms are “degenerative” rather than work-related — but aggravation of a pre-existing condition is one of the most litigated and winnable issues before the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission.

Back and spine: Back injuries are the most common work injury resulting in missed time. Herniated discs, spinal fusions, and neck injuries account for some of the highest settlement values. Workers with pre-existing arthritis or degenerative disc disease still qualify if the work injury aggravated the condition. Of the injuries I litigate to hearing, back injuries with pre-existing imaging are the most contested category by a significant margin.

Shoulder and upper extremity: Rotator cuff tears and torn biceps tendons are routinely attributed to “normal aging” by defense IME doctors, even when the injury happened on a specific date doing a specific task. Hand and finger injuries and carpal tunnel syndrome from repetitive motion round out this category.

Knee and lower extremity: Insurers routinely argue that meniscus tears and ACL tears are degenerative rather than traumatic, especially in workers over 40. Total knee replacements produce the highest PPD values in this category. Full knee guide → Also covered: ankle injuries, foot fractures, and hip injuries.

Head and brain: A TBI — even a so-called mild concussion — can mean years of cognitive and vocational consequences that the PPD schedule doesn’t fully account for. These cases require a different evidentiary approach. Concussions and head injury settlements →  |  Serious TBI guide →

Psychological: Workers with physical injuries who also develop depression or anxiety often never file for it — because they don’t know the compensable consequence doctrine covers psychological conditions that flow from a covered physical injury. It does. PTSD is separately covered for first responders under Virginia’s heart and lung presumption. I see the psychological claim missed regularly.

Other serious injuries: Burns, amputations, and spinal cord injuries tend to generate the most aggressive early settlement push from insurers — they know the long-term exposure before you do. Also covered: electrocution, hearing loss, CRPS/RSD, nerve damage, and eye injuries.

Full list of covered injuries with settlement values →

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Industries and Employers

Workers’ comp claims vary by industry. The employers, the injury patterns, the insurance carriers, and the defense tactics are all different depending on where you work.

Construction: The BLS consistently records more workplace fatalities in construction than any other private industry — about one in five U.S. worker deaths. Virginia construction claims are also the most likely to carry a third-party personal injury lawsuit alongside the comp claim, which can recover pain and suffering that workers’ comp never pays. Falls, forklift accidents, crane accidents, trench collapses. Full construction guide →

Amazon warehouse workers are among the most frequently injured workers I represent in Virginia. Sedgwick manages Amazon’s claims nationally. One thing workers consistently don’t know: AMCARE, Amazon’s on-site medical unit, is not a treating physician under Virginia workers’ comp law and cannot serve as your authorized provider.

Nursing and healthcare: Patient transfer injuries, needle sticks, and workplace violence. BLS data shows healthcare workers suffer injuries at rates exceeding many industries traditionally considered dangerous. Sentara, HCA, and Riverside are Virginia’s largest healthcare employers. Full healthcare and nursing guide →

Retail and warehouse: Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe’s, Dollar General, Food Lion, Kroger, Target, UPS.

Trucking and delivery: Highway accidents, loading dock injuries, back injuries from driving and lifting.

Teachers and school employees: School violence, slip and falls, repetitive stress.

Police officers and first responders: Heart and lung presumption, PTSD coverage.

Airlines: American Airlines, United Airlines, and other carriers with Virginia-jurisdiction claims.

All employers and industries →

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Where Virginia Workers’ Comp Intersects Other Benefits

Work injuries often trigger eligibility for other programs. Failing to explore all available benefits leaves money on the table.

A work injury that keeps you out for 12 months or more may qualify you for two income streams simultaneously. Social Security Disability (SSDI) runs alongside workers’ comp — you can receive both at the same time, though the combined amount may be subject to an offset calculation. Most workers I meet don’t apply for SSDI because they assume comp is the only option.

Long-term disability insurance: Your employer’s LTD policy may provide additional benefits — but most LTD policies contain offset clauses that reduce payments by the amount you receive from workers’ comp.

Short-term disability: Generally, you cannot collect both STD and workers’ comp wage loss benefits simultaneously. Workers who filed for STD first — because their employer told them to — often discover it creates an offset against their comp benefits later. Mention it early so we can structure things correctly.

FMLA: Your employer may designate your workers’ comp leave as FMLA leave running concurrently. Your 12 weeks of FMLA job protection can be consumed while you’re still receiving comp benefits — leaving you without job protection earlier than you’d expect.

Virginia Retirement System (VRS): State and local government employees may have both a workers’ comp claim and a VRS disability retirement claim available. The sequencing of these claims matters significantly and is worth discussing before you accept any offer.

Federal systems: Federal employee → FECA. Maritime worker → LHWCA or Jones Act. Railroad worker → FELA. Is workers’ comp state or federal? →

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Real Results for Virginia Workers

These are actual outcomes — with the disputes that nearly cost each client their recovery and what we did to win. Every case below was resolved through Commission hearings, appellate proceedings, or negotiated settlements where the insurer knew we were prepared to try it.

In the past year alone, this firm has settled dozens of cases for more than $100,000 — many representing multiple years of wage loss benefits combined with estimated future medical expenses that most workers never thought to calculate before accepting an offer.

$1,000,000+
Northern Virginia · Arm Amputation
A laborer required arm amputation from defective equipment at a lumber yard. Product liability claim in addition to workers’ comp.
$168,000
Richmond · Amazon Warehouse / Rotator Cuff
Amazon RIC2 warehouse worker. Rotator cuff tear requiring surgery. Sedgwick cut off TTD early and pushed return to work before medical clearance — one of the most common tactics I see in warehouse injury claims. We obtained an Award Letter reinstating benefits and settled after surgery for $168,000.

Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome in your case. Each case is evaluated on its individual facts and circumstances.

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What to Do Next

If you do nothing else today, report your injury to your employer in writing. Text your supervisor, email HR, fill out an accident report — anything that creates a documented record. Everything else flows from that one step.

Then: get medical care and ask your doctor for written work restrictions at every visit. Do not give a recorded statement to the adjuster without talking to an attorney. Do not accept the first settlement offer — it is almost always a lowball.

The adjuster assigned to your claim has worked hundreds of Virginia workers’ comp cases. She knows the filing deadlines, the IME doctors who produce favorable defense reports, and exactly how to calculate an AWW argument that underpays you. The question is whether you’re walking into that process with the same level of preparation — or learning it as you go.

Call (804) 251-1620 for a free consultation — leave a message 24/7. I’ll tell you what your claim is worth, what the insurance company’s playbook looks like for your injury type, and what to do next.

You pay nothing unless we recover benefits or a settlement for you.

Free Consultation →