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What Happens If Your Employer Doesn’t Have Workers’ Compensation Insurance in North Carolina?

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What Happens If Your Employer Doesn’t Have Workers’ Compensation Insurance in North Carolina?

20Feb

Most workers assume that if they are hurt on the job, workers’ compensation insurance will be there to cover medical treatment and lost wages. In many cases, that is true. North Carolina law requires most employers with three or more employees to carry workers’ compensation coverage.

But what happens if your employer never had coverage in place, or let the policy lapse, and you are suddenly facing medical bills, time off work, and no clear path forward?

Learning that your employer does not have workers’ compensation insurance can create immediate uncertainty. You may wonder whether you can still file a workers’ compensation claim, whether the North Carolina Industrial Commission can help, or whether you now have the right to pursue a civil lawsuit instead.

The good news is that you are not automatically left without protection. North Carolina workers’ compensation laws include mechanisms designed to address uninsured employers and protect injured workers. However, these cases are often more complex than standard claims and require careful handling from the beginning.

Understanding how the law applies and what options may be available is an important first step after a workplace injury.

Are Employers Required to Carry Workers’ Compensation Insurance in North Carolina?

A person in a suit signs documents at a desk with a golden balance scale in the foreground, symbolizing law or legal proceedings related to workers compensation in North Carolina.

In North Carolina, most employers with three or more employees are required to carry workers’ compensation insurance. This rule applies to full-time and part-time workers. The purpose is simple: if an employee suffers a workplace injury, there should be insurance in place to cover medical treatment and wage replacement benefits.

Certain industries, including construction and transportation, are scrutinized closely because of the higher risk of workplace injuries. Corporate officers and some business owners may elect to exclude themselves from coverage, but that does not remove the obligation to provide coverage for qualifying employees.

The North Carolina Industrial Commission oversees compliance and enforces these requirements. Employers who fail to carry workers’ compensation insurance can face civil penalties of up to $100 per day for noncompliance, criminal charges in serious cases, and personal liability for benefits owed to injured workers.

Despite these requirements, some employers operate without coverage, intentionally or unintentionally, leaving injured workers unsure of what happens next.

What If Your Employer Is Uninsured?

If your employer does not have workers’ compensation insurance at the time of your injury, you are not automatically barred from pursuing benefits.

North Carolina maintains an Uninsured Employers Fund (UEF) designed to protect injured workers when a noncompliant employer lacks coverage. The Fund may step in to pay certain workers’ compensation benefits while the Industrial Commission pursues reimbursement and penalties against the employer.

However, these claims often involve additional investigation and procedural steps. The Commission may need to determine:

  • Whether the employer legally qualified as required to carry coverage
  • Whether the injured worker meets the statutory definition of an employee
  • Whether the injury arose out of and in the course of employment

Because there is no insurance carrier involved, the process can be slower and more contested. Employers who lack coverage may dispute the claim more aggressively, particularly when they are facing potential penalties.

Can You Sue an Employer Who Doesn’t Have Coverage?

In most standard workers’ compensation cases, employees cannot sue their employer for negligence. Workers’ compensation is considered an “exclusive remedy,” meaning it replaces the right to file a civil lawsuit in exchange for guaranteed no-fault benefits.

When an employer fails to carry required workers’ compensation insurance, that exclusive remedy protection may be lost.

In certain situations, an injured worker may have the right to pursue a personal injury lawsuit against the uninsured employer. Unlike workers’ compensation claims, civil lawsuits require proof of negligence and are subject to North Carolina’s contributory negligence rule. That rule can bar recovery if the injured person is found even slightly at fault.

This creates a strategic decision. In some cases, pursuing workers’ compensation through the Uninsured Employers Fund may be the more stable route. In others, litigation may be appropriate. The specific facts of the injury and the employer’s financial condition often influence that decision.

How the Claim Process Works When Coverage Is Missing

Person using a calculator and reviewing documents at a desk with papers, a notebook, eyeglasses, and information on workers compensation benefits.

Even if an employer is uninsured, injured workers must still follow standard reporting rules.

You should:

  • Report the workplace injury to your employer immediately
  • Provide written notice within 30 days
  • File a Form 18 with the North Carolina Industrial Commission within two years of the injury

Failure to meet these deadlines can jeopardize your claim, even if your employer failed to carry insurance.

After filing, the Industrial Commission may investigate coverage status and determine whether the Uninsured Employers Fund applies. If benefits are awarded, the Fund may seek repayment directly from the employer.

Because uninsured employer cases often involve compliance investigations and additional hearings, documentation and timing matter more than ever.

Why Uninsured Employer Cases Are More Complex

When insurance coverage exists, there is typically an adjuster, a defense attorney, and a structured claims process.

When no coverage exists, several complications may arise:

  • The employer may deny the employment relationship
  • The employer may claim fewer than three employees
  • Multiple contractor or subcontractor layers may be involved
  • The business may lack assets or may file for bankruptcy

In some industries, particularly construction and transportation, determining which entity is legally responsible can require close analysis of contracts and control over the work performed.

These disputes are not uncommon. Nationwide, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that private industry employers record hundreds of thousands of nonfatal workplace injuries annually. While North Carolina’s overall injury rates have improved over time, enforcement actions against uninsured employers continue each year, underscoring that noncompliance remains an issue.

When an employer lacks coverage, the financial risk shifts and that often leads to more aggressive defense tactics.

Understanding Your Options After a Workplace Injury

Discovering that your employer does not have workers’ compensation insurance can feel overwhelming. Medical bills may be arriving, wages may be interrupted, and the path forward may not be immediately clear.

North Carolina workers’ compensation laws are structured to prevent injured workers from being left without protection. The Uninsured Employers Fund, Industrial Commission enforcement authority, and potential civil remedies exist for that reason. However, uninsured employer cases require careful evaluation of employment status, coverage obligations, and the best procedural route.

If you were injured at work and have concerns about whether your employer carried proper workers’ compensation insurance, understanding your legal options early can make a significant difference in how your claim proceeds.

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