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Workers’ Compensation Insurance Requirements in Washington
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Workers’ Compensation Insurance Requirements in Washington
Washington is one of only four states where you cannot buy workers’ comp from a private insurance company at all. Every employer must open an account with the Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) or qualify for certified self-insurance, and contractors who skip this step face steep per-day penalties plus full liability for injury costs.
Washington Workers’ Compensation Legal Requirements
Washington requires essentially every employer with even one employee to maintain a workers’ comp account through L&I, since there is no minimum-employee exemption like most states have.
- Coverage is mandatory from the first employee — there is no small-employer exemption
- Coverage must be purchased through the Washington Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) state fund, or via certified self-insurance for large employers ($25M+ in assets, 3+ years in business)
- Uninsured employers face a penalty up to $250/day (capped at $50,000), plus a claim-cost penalty of up to 100% of claim costs if a worker is injured while unregistered
- Failing to open an L&I account before hiring covered workers carries a separate penalty of twice unpaid premiums or $1,000, whichever is greater
How Washington’s Workers’ Comp System Works
System type: Monopolistic State Fund
Washington’s monopolistic_note per the Oregon DCBS study: “State fund administers workers’ comp; self-insurance is allowed as an alternative, but there is no private-carrier market.” That means Trade Safe can’t shop your base workers’ comp coverage across carriers here — every employer buys directly from L&I, though large qualifying businesses can self-insure. Washington’s overall premium index ranks 12th of 51 states at 123% of the national median, per the Oregon study, making it a comparatively higher-cost state for base rates.
How Washington’s Rates Compare by Trade
| Trade (NCCI Class Code) | National Rank (of 51) | Rate per $100 of Payroll |
|---|---|---|
| Roofing (Class 5551) | 13th of 51 | $13.46 |
| Electrical Wiring (Class 5190) | 33rd of 51 | $2.07 |
| Plumbing NOC (Class 5183) | 14th of 51 | $3.31 |
Source: Oregon Dept. of Consumer and Business Services, 2024 Workers’ Compensation Premium Rate Ranking Study (published June 2025) — the only study benchmarking all 50 states plus DC on a common industry mix.
Filing a Workers’ Comp Claim in Washington
Injured workers file claims directly with L&I (not a private carrier), and the employer’s L&I account is billed based on claim experience. Employers must report the injury to L&I and provide the required paperwork, and self-insured employers manage their own claims process under L&I oversight.
Penalties for Non-Compliance
L&I can assess up to $250/day (max $50,000) for operating without a required account, plus a claim-cost penalty of up to 100% of an injured worker’s claim costs if the business was unregistered at the time of injury, per L&I’s employer guide.
Resources: Washington L&I – Do I Need a Workers’ Comp Account?, L&I Employers’ Guide to Workers’ Comp Insurance, L&I Penalties and Interest
How Much Does Workers’ Comp Insurance Cost in Washington?
Because coverage runs through L&I rather than competing private carriers, rates are set by the state fund rather than shopped. The Oregon DCBS study benchmarks these trade-specific base rates.
| Trade | Estimated Cost per $100 Payroll | What Drives It |
|---|---|---|
| Roofing | $13.46 (per the Oregon study’s Class 5551 rate) | Elevated fall risk drives this well above the electrical and plumbing rates |
| Electrical | $2.07 (per the Oregon study’s Class 5190 rate) | Lower injury severity keeps this near the middle of the pack nationally |
| Plumbing | $3.31 (per the Oregon study’s Class 5183 rate) | Moderate risk profile compared to other Washington trades |
What Moves the Price Up or Down
- Because there’s no private-carrier competition, your L&I rate class and experience factor matter more than shopping the market
- Self-insurance is only realistic for large, established employers — not most small contractors
- Claims history directly affects your L&I experience rating and future premiums
- Overall Washington ranks 12th of 51 states at 123% of the national median index rate, so base costs run above average
Rates are drawn from the Oregon DCBS 2024 Workers’ Compensation Premium Rate Ranking Study base index rates; because Washington is a monopolistic state, actual cost depends on your L&I risk classification and claims experience rather than carrier shopping. Talk to Trade Safe about the ancillary coverage that pairs with your required L&I account.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I buy workers’ comp from a private insurer in Washington?
No. Washington is a monopolistic state fund state — nearly all employers must buy coverage directly through L&I. Only large, certified self-insured employers are an exception, not a private-market option.
Does Washington require coverage from the first employee?
Yes. Unlike most states, Washington has no small-employer exemption — coverage is required as soon as you have one employee.
What’s the penalty for an unregistered L&I account in Washington?
Up to $250 per day (capped at $50,000), and if a worker is injured while the business is unregistered, L&I can assess a claim-cost penalty of up to 100% of the claim.
Can a Washington business self-insure instead of using the state fund?
Yes, but only large employers that meet strict criteria — generally $25 million or more in assets, at least three years in business, and an approved accident-prevention program.
Workers’ compensation requirements and penalties can change; verify current rules with the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries before making coverage decisions.
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