Average weekly wage is the dollar amount your workers’ comp checks are built on. In plain terms, your average weekly wage is what you normally earned each week before you got hurt. Your state takes that number, then pays you a percentage of it while you cannot work. For example, most states pay about two-thirds of your average weekly wage. So this one figure decides how big your weekly check will be. Getting it right matters more than almost anything else in your claim.
What Average Weekly Wage Means
Your average weekly wage is the starting point for your wage-replacement benefits. It is not your benefit check. Instead, it is the base number used to calculate that check. Think of it as your “normal week” in dollars.
In most cases, the average weekly wage includes more than your base hourly pay. It can also count overtime, bonuses, tips, and sometimes the value of lodging or meals. According to the U.S. Department of Labor, the goal is to capture your true earning power, not just one slow paycheck.
For example, imagine you earned $52,000 in gross pay over the year before your injury. Divide that by 52 weeks. Your average weekly wage is $1,000. That single number now drives the rest of your claim.
How Average Weekly Wage Is Calculated
The most common method is simple. Take your gross (pre-tax) earnings for the 52 weeks before your injury. Then divide by 52. That gives your average weekly wage. Your state then pays a set percentage of it, typically two-thirds, as your weekly disability benefit.
However, every state sets a maximum weekly benefit. So even with a high average weekly wage, your check is capped. The cap usually tracks the statewide average weekly wage and changes each year. The table below shows current 2026 figures from state workers’ comp agencies.
| Item | Figure (2026) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Worked example: $52,000 ÷ 52 weeks | $1,000 AWW | DOL method |
| Weekly benefit at two-thirds of $1,000 AWW | $666.67 | DOL method |
| California max weekly TTD benefit | $1,764.11 | CA DIR/DWC |
| California min weekly TTD benefit | $264.61 | CA DIR/DWC |
| New York max weekly benefit (to June 30, 2026) | $1,222.42 | NY WCB |
| New York max weekly benefit (from July 1, 2026) | $1,281.50 | NY WCB |
| New Jersey max weekly benefit | $1,199.00 | NJ DOL |
For example, a New York worker with a $1,000 average weekly wage would get $666.67 per week. That is below the state cap, so they receive the full two-thirds. A very high earner, however, would be limited to the maximum. Always confirm your exact figure with your state board and a licensed attorney.
Who Qualifies and How Long It Lasts
Most employees hurt on the job qualify. If your injury keeps you off work, your average weekly wage sets your temporary total disability check. If you can work but earn less, it sets your partial benefit instead. In most cases, the benefit pays two-thirds of the gap between old and new pay.
These checks typically last while you recover. Many claimants keep receiving them until they reach maximum medical improvement (MMI). MMI is the point where your doctor says you are as healed as you are likely to get. As a result, benefits may then shift to a permanent disability award or a settlement.
Some states limit how many weeks you can collect. Others tie it to your recovery. Because the rules vary, confirm the duration with your state workers’ comp board and a licensed attorney.
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How Average Weekly Wage Fits Into Your Overall Claim
Your average weekly wage does more than set your weekly check. It also shapes your final settlement. Permanent disability awards are often figured from your comp rate, which comes straight from your average weekly wage. So a higher, correct number can raise your whole claim’s value.
For example, scheduled injuries (like a hand or foot) are often valued as a set number of weeks multiplied by your weekly comp rate. If your average weekly wage is wrong, that math is wrong too. Typical settlement ranges vary widely, from a few thousand dollars to six figures, depending on severity, body part, and your wage. These estimates are illustrative, and every case is different.
This is why the average weekly wage is worth checking closely. Ask the insurer how they figured it. Compare it to your pay stubs and W-2. If overtime or a second job was left out, your number may be too low. You may be entitled to a correction and back pay.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does my average weekly wage include overtime and bonuses?
In most cases, yes. Your average weekly wage typically counts gross earnings, including overtime, bonuses, and tips. The U.S. Department of Labor’s approach aims to reflect your real earning power. Confirm the details with your state board.
What if I had not worked a full year before my injury?
Then your state uses a shorter or alternate method. For example, it may use the weeks you did work, or the wages of a similar coworker. The goal is still a fair average weekly wage. A licensed attorney can check the math.
Can my average weekly wage be corrected after benefits start?
Often, yes. If you find missing pay, you can ask for a recalculation. You may be entitled to back pay on the difference. However, deadlines apply, so confirm with your state workers’ comp board and a licensed attorney.
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.
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.
Related Guides
- Workers Comp Settlements by State (All 50)
- Workers Comp Claims by State (All 50)
- More in This Category
- Settlements by Injury
- Benefits Explained
- Workers Comp Glossary
Informational only — not legal, medical, or financial advice. Workers Comp Explained is an independent educational resource, not a law firm, insurer, or medical or financial advisor, and this page does not provide legal, medical, or financial advice. Workers’ compensation benefits, deadlines, and rules vary by state and change over time, and settlement estimates are illustrative only. Always confirm the exact figure and any deadline with your state’s workers’ compensation board and a licensed attorney before you act.