What Is Temporary Total Disability (TTD)?

✓ Verified June 24, 2026

Temporary total disability is the workers’ comp benefit that replaces part of your paycheck while you cannot work at all because of a job injury. In plain terms, temporary total disability pays you a weekly check when your doctor says you must stay completely off work for a while. The “temporary” part means you are expected to recover. The “total” part means you cannot do any work right now. As a result, this benefit is meant to bridge the gap until you heal enough to return.

The short answer: Temporary total disability (often called TTD) is wage replacement for injured workers who are fully off work while recovering. In most states it pays about two-thirds of your average weekly wage, up to a state cap. It starts after a short waiting period and ends when you can return to work or reach maximum medical improvement.

What Temporary Total Disability Means

Temporary total disability is not a payment for the injury itself. Instead, it replaces wages you lose while healing. Your doctor decides when you cannot work at all, even light duty. During that time, you receive a weekly check from the workers’ comp insurer.

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For example, imagine a warehouse worker who tears a shoulder lifting boxes. The doctor takes her off work completely for eight weeks. She cannot earn her normal pay, so temporary total disability replaces part of it. Once she can do light duty or full duty, these checks usually stop.

This benefit is one of the most common in any claim. It exists so a hurt worker is not left with zero income while waiting to recover.

How Temporary Total Disability Is Calculated

The math is simpler than it sounds. In most cases, your weekly check equals two-thirds (66 2/3%) of your average weekly wage. Your average weekly wage is usually based on your earnings in the 52 weeks before the injury. However, every state sets a maximum and a minimum.

For example, suppose you earned $900 per week before your injury. Two-thirds of $900 is $600. As a result, your temporary total disability check would be $600 per week. Higher earners often hit the state cap, so their check is limited to the maximum below.

State (2026) Formula Maximum weekly TTD
California 66 2/3% of average weekly wage $1,764.11 (min $264.61)
New York 66 2/3% of average weekly wage $1,222.42
New Jersey 70% of average weekly wage $1,199.00
Worked example ($900/wk wage) 2/3 × $900 $600.00 per week

Figures are from each state’s official workers’ comp agency and apply to 2026 dates of injury. These numbers change yearly. Therefore, confirm your exact rate with your state board and a licensed attorney before counting on a number.

Who Qualifies and How Long It Lasts

You generally qualify when a treating doctor certifies you cannot work at all because of a covered job injury. Most states have a short waiting period first. For example, California uses a three-day waiting period, waived if you are hospitalized or off work past 14 days.

Temporary total disability continues while you stay fully disabled and are still healing. Typically, it ends in one of three ways. You return to work, your doctor releases you to light duty, or you reach maximum medical improvement (MMI). MMI means your condition has stabilized and is not expected to improve much more.

Watch your deadlines. You usually must report the injury to your employer quickly — often within 30 days — and file a formal claim within a set window. For example, California allows up to one year to file, while New York generally allows two years. Confirm your exact notice and filing deadlines with your state workers’ comp board and a licensed attorney right away.

Many states also cap how many weeks temporary total disability can run. As a result, the benefit is not unlimited, even if your recovery is slow.

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How It Fits Into Your Overall Claim

Temporary total disability is only one piece of your claim. It covers lost wages during recovery. Your medical treatment is paid separately and should not come out of these checks.

When you reach MMI, the focus often shifts. If your injury leaves lasting limits, you may be entitled to permanent disability benefits. Many claims also end in a settlement. A settlement may fold together past temporary total disability owed, future medical costs, and any permanent impairment.

Settlement values vary widely. They depend on your wages, your body part, your permanent rating, and your state’s rules. Any settlement estimate is illustrative only, and every case is different. Therefore, confirm what your claim is truly worth with your state board and a licensed attorney before signing anything.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does temporary total disability pay?

In most states, it pays about two-thirds of your average weekly wage, up to a state maximum. For example, California caps it at $1,764.11 per week in 2026. Lower earners are protected by a minimum rate.

Is my temporary total disability check taxable?

In most cases, workers’ comp wage benefits are not taxed as income. However, your situation can differ if you also receive Social Security disability. Confirm the details with a tax professional and your state board.

When do temporary total disability payments stop?

They typically stop when you return to work, get released to light duty, or reach maximum medical improvement. Some states also cap the total number of weeks. Your doctor’s reports usually drive these decisions.

Bottom line: Temporary total disability replaces about two-thirds of your wages while you are fully off work and healing, up to your state’s cap. It is a bridge, not a final settlement, and it ends at recovery or MMI. Confirm your exact rate and deadlines 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.

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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