Filing a workers comp claim comes down to two deadlines that injured workers most often miss: the short window to report your injury to your employer, and the longer statute of limitations to file the formal claim. Miss either one and you can lose your benefits, even with a valid injury. This guide lays out both deadlines for every state, so you can see exactly how long you have to file a workers comp claim where you work.
- Workers Comp Claim Deadlines by State (All 50 States)
- The Two Deadlines Every Workers Comp Claim Has
- How to File a Workers Comp Claim
- Occupational Disease and Repetitive Injuries
- What Happens If You Miss a Deadline
- If Your Workers Comp Claim Is Denied
- Find Your State’s Workers Comp Claim Steps
- Official Sources

Click any state below to read its full claim guide, with the exact steps to file, the forms you need, and what to do if your claim is denied.
Quick Facts – Workers Comp Claim Deadlines by State (2026)
- There are two separate deadlines: a short one to report your injury to your employer, and a longer one (the statute of limitations) to file the formal claim – you must meet both
- The deadline to report your injury ranges from as little as 3 days (South Dakota, Wyoming) to 180 days (Utah), and many states simply say “as soon as practicable”
- The deadline to file your claim is usually 1 to 3 years, but it is as short as 90 days in Nevada and as long as 4 years in Massachusetts
- For occupational diseases (hearing loss, lung disease, repetitive strain), the clock often starts when you knew or should have known the condition was work-related – not the first day of exposure
- Reporting late or only verbally is one of the most common reasons a claim is denied – put it in writing and keep a copy
- Deadlines are statutory and can change; always confirm your state’s current rule with the state board or an attorney before you act
Workers Comp Claim Deadlines by State (All 50 States)
The table below shows the two deadlines that decide whether your claim is on time. Here is what each column means.
Report to Employer = how long you have to notify your employer of the injury. This is the short deadline, and missing it is the fastest way to lose a claim. “As soon as practicable” means report it right away.
Time to File Claim = the statute of limitations to file the formal claim with the state. This is the longer deadline, usually measured in years from the date of injury.
| State | Report to Employer | Time to File Claim |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 5 days | 2 years |
| Alaska | 30 days | 2 years |
| Arizona | As soon as practicable | 1 year |
| Arkansas | As soon as practicable | 2 years |
| California | 30 days | 1 year |
| Colorado | 10 days | 2 years |
| Connecticut | As soon as practicable | 1 year |
| Delaware | 90 days | 2 years |
| Florida | 30 days | 2 years |
| Georgia | 30 days | 1 year |
| Hawaii | As soon as practicable | 2 years |
| Idaho | 60 days | 1 year |
| Illinois | 45 days | 3 years |
| Indiana | 30 days | 2 years |
| Iowa | 90 days | 2 years |
| Kansas | 20 days | 3 years |
| Kentucky | As soon as practicable | 2 years |
| Louisiana | 30 days | 1 year |
| Maine | 60 days | 1 year |
| Maryland | 10 days | 2 years |
| Massachusetts | As soon as practicable | 4 years |
| Michigan | 90 days | 2 years |
| Minnesota | 14 days | 3 years |
| Mississippi | 30 days | 2 years |
| Missouri | 30 days | 2 years |
| Montana | 30 days | 1 year |
| Nebraska | As soon as practicable | 2 years |
| Nevada | 7 days | 90 days |
| New Hampshire | 2 years | 3 years |
| New Jersey | 14 days | 2 years |
| New Mexico | 15 days | 1 year |
| New York | 30 days | 2 years |
| North Carolina | 30 days | 2 years |
| North Dakota | 7 days | 1 year |
| Ohio | As soon as practicable | 1 year |
| Oklahoma | 30 days | 1 year |
| Oregon | 90 days | 1 year |
| Pennsylvania | 21 days | 3 years |
| Rhode Island | 30 days | 2 years |
| South Carolina | 90 days | 2 years |
| South Dakota | 3 days | 2 years |
| Tennessee | 15 days | 1 year |
| Texas | 30 days | 1 year |
| Utah | 180 days | 6 years* |
| Vermont | As soon as practicable | 6 months |
| Virginia | 30 days | 2 years |
| Washington | As soon as practicable | 1 year |
| West Virginia | As soon as practicable | 6 months |
| Wisconsin | 30 days | 2 years |
| Wyoming | 3 days | 1 year |
*Utah allows 1 year for medical benefits and 6 years for disability benefits. Several states also run the clock from your last compensation payment or from when an occupational disease was discovered. These are headline figures – your state’s guide above has the precise rule and statute.
The Two Deadlines Every Workers Comp Claim Has
Almost every workers comp claim runs on two clocks at once, and confusing them is the single most common filing mistake. The first clock is notice – telling your employer you were hurt. The second is the statute of limitations – filing the formal claim with the state. You have to beat both, and the notice clock is almost always the shorter and more urgent of the two.
Because the notice deadline can be as short as a few days, the safest move after any work injury is to report it in writing immediately, even if the injury seems minor. A sore back or a tweaked knee can turn into a serious claim weeks later, and an early written report protects you if the injury worsens.
How to File a Workers Comp Claim
Filing a workers comp claim generally follows the same path in most states, even though the exact forms differ. The steps below are the typical order.
- Get medical care first. Your health comes before paperwork, and the medical record becomes key evidence for your claim.
- Report the injury to your employer in writing – within your state’s notice deadline above – and keep a dated copy.
- Complete your state’s claim form. In some states you file it; in others (like California) the employer files on your behalf after you report.
- File the claim with the state board before the statute of limitations runs, and track its status.
- If it is denied, you generally have the right to appeal – your state’s claim guide explains the appeal deadline.
Occupational Disease and Repetitive Injuries
Injuries that develop slowly – hearing loss, lung disease, carpal tunnel – make the deadlines trickier, because there is no single accident date. For these, most states start the clock on the day you knew, or reasonably should have known, that your condition was related to your work. A doctor’s diagnosis linking the condition to your job is often what starts the deadline for this kind of claim.
What Happens If You Miss a Deadline
Missing a deadline usually means your claim is “time-barred” – the board dismisses it and you lose access to medical and wage benefits, with limited exceptions. Some states pause (toll) the clock if the employer failed to post required notices, fraudulently hid information, or if the worker is a minor. If you think you have missed a deadline, it is worth confirming with an attorney before assuming the claim is dead, because the exceptions are narrow but real.
If Your Workers Comp Claim Is Denied
A denial is not the end. Claims are denied for fixable reasons – late notice, missing paperwork, a dispute over whether the injury is work-related – and every state gives you a right to appeal within a set time. Many injured workers have a lawyer review a denied claim, since the insurer has its own legal team. Your state’s guide above covers the appeal steps and deadlines.
Find Your State’s Workers Comp Claim Steps
Ready to file? Click any state in the table above for its full claim guide, or browse the complete claims cluster below.
Browse All 50 State Claim Guides →
If your claim was denied or a deadline is close, many injured workers choose to have a lawyer review their case. You are never required to, and our guides are free to read either way.
Official Sources
- U.S. Department of Labor: dol.gov – federal overview of state workers’ compensation programs
- State workers’ comp boards: each state’s official board publishes its notice and filing deadlines and the claim forms – linked in the individual state guides above
- State statutes: each state’s workers’ compensation act sets the exact deadline and any exceptions; your state guide cites the controlling section
Deadlines compiled from state workers’ compensation statutes and board guidance and cross-checked against state sources. These are headline figures for standard injuries; occupational-disease clocks, last-payment rules, and state-specific exceptions can change the deadline. Deadlines also change as legislatures amend the law. Click any state above for its verified guide with the controlling statute. Last reviewed June 2026.
Disclaimer: This page is for general informational purposes only and is not legal, medical, or financial advice. Workers Comp Explained is an independent educational resource, not a law firm, insurer, or medical or financial advisor. Workers’ compensation deadlines and rules vary by state and change over time, and missing a deadline can end your right to benefits. Always confirm the exact deadline that applies to you with your state’s workers’ compensation board and a licensed attorney before you act.