Can You Work a Second Job While on Workers Comp?

✓ Verified June 24, 2026

Work a second job while on workers’ comp is something many injured workers wonder about, often because money is tight and the bills do not stop. The short version is reassuring: in most cases you can, but there are clear rules. You must stay within your doctor’s restrictions.

You must report every dollar you earn. Honest workers do this all the time and keep their benefits. The danger is not the second job itself — it is hiding income or ignoring your work limits. Let us walk through it calmly, step by step.

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The short answer: In most states, you can work a second job while on workers’ comp, as long as the work fits your medical restrictions and you report your earnings. Your wage benefits may go down, because comp pays a share of the wages you cannot earn. However, your medical benefits usually continue. Hiding the job — not the job itself — is what gets claims denied or treated as fraud.

Where You Stand: Work A Second Job

Workers’ comp wage checks replace part of the income you lost because of your injury. Typically, that is two-thirds of your average weekly wage, up to a state cap. When you work a second job and earn money, the insurer pays less, because you have recovered some wages. For example, if you return to lighter work, comp may pay two-thirds of the difference. The U.S. Department of Labor explains these wage-replacement basics for covered workers at dol.gov.

The rule shifts based on one key fact. Did you already work a second job before you got hurt? If so, those wages are often part of your benefit calculation. If you take a new second job after the injury, the new pay usually reduces your check. As a result, the timing matters a great deal.

The exact dollar figures vary by state. Here are current 2026 maximum weekly benefit caps and reporting deadlines from official sources.

State 2026 max weekly benefit Report injury deadline Deadline to file claim
California $1,764.11 30 days 1 year from injury
New York $1,222.42 30 days 2 years
Florida $1,358.00 30 days 2 years
Pennsylvania $1,394.00 21 days (120-day limit) 3 years

Sources: California DIR, New York WCB, Florida CFO, and Pennsylvania DLI. These figures are exact for 2026, but caps update yearly. Confirm your number with your state board.

What to Do (Step by Step)

First, follow your doctor’s written restrictions exactly. If your second job breaks those limits, do not do it. For example, a desk shift may be fine while heavy lifting is not. The work you do must match the recovery your doctor describes.

Second, report the second job and your earnings in writing. Tell your employer and the insurer before your first paycheck clears. In most cases, they will adjust your wage benefit, not cancel your care. Keep copies of every pay stub and every email.

Third, watch your filing dates closely. A missed deadline can end a valid claim no matter how strong it is.

Most states give you only a short window to report a work injury — often 30 days — and a separate, longer deadline to file the formal claim, which ranges from one to three years. Pennsylvania, for example, sets a 120-day outer limit to report. Confirm your exact dates with your state workers’ comp board and a licensed attorney before you act.

Common Mistakes and What to Watch For

The biggest mistake is silence. Some workers think a small side job is too minor to mention. However, unreported income while collecting benefits can look like fraud, even when you meant no harm. As a result, always report first and ask questions later.

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Another trap is ignoring your restrictions to earn more. If a surveillance video shows you lifting boxes your doctor banned, the insurer may cut your benefits. When you work a second job, keep it inside your medical limits, every shift.

People also miss money they are owed. If you held a second job before your injury, those wages may belong in your average weekly wage. Typically that raises your benefit. Many claimants never ask, so they get paid on one job’s wages instead of two.

When to Get a Lawyer Involved

You do not need a lawyer to ask a question or report a job. Many workers handle simple claims alone. However, certain signals mean it is time to get real help, and that help is on your side, not a sales pitch.

Call a workers’ comp attorney if the insurer cuts your benefits after you take a second job. The same goes if they refuse to count your pre-injury second-job wages. For example, that single issue can change your weekly check for the life of the claim.

Also reach out if you are accused of unreported income, asked to a deposition, or pushed to settle fast. A licensed attorney in your state can confirm your benefit math and protect the work you have already done.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will my comp check stop if I work a second job?

Usually not — it is more likely to shrink than stop. Comp pays a share of the wages you cannot earn, so new income lowers that share. Your medical benefits typically continue regardless.

Do I have to tell the insurance company about a side gig?

Yes. You must report all income while on a claim, including gig and cash work. Reporting it keeps you safe; hiding it can be treated as fraud. When in doubt, report it in writing.

Can they count my old second job to raise my benefit?

In many states, yes. If you held a second job before the injury, those wages may be added to your average weekly wage. This can raise your check, so ask your state board and a licensed attorney to confirm.

Bottom line: You usually can work a second job while on workers’ comp if it fits your doctor’s limits and you report what you earn. Honesty protects your claim far more than the extra income risks it. Confirm your exact benefit figure and every deadline with your state workers’ comp board and a licensed attorney before you act, since every case is different and these settlement and benefit estimates are illustrative only.

See your state’s exact numbers

What you are owed depends on your state’s benefit caps and deadlines. Start with your state’s settlement and claim guides for the exact figures.

Find Your State’s Workers Comp Guide →

Sources & How to Verify

The figures on this page come from official government and industry sources. Workers’ comp benefit caps, deadlines, and rules change, so always confirm the exact figure with your state’s workers’ comp board or a licensed attorney before acting. Settlement estimates are illustrative, and every case is different.

  • Your state workers’ comp board, division, or commission: the official source for your state’s exact caps, deadlines, and forms — search “[your state] workers compensation board”
  • U.S. Department of Labor (OWCP): dol.gov — federal workers’ compensation overview
  • NCCI: ncci.com — workers’ comp rating and benefit data
  • Social Security Administration: ssa.gov — benefit-cap and SSDI offset data
  • Insurance Information Institute: iii.org — neutral workers’ comp background

Content last reviewed June 2026. If you notice an outdated figure, please contact us.

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