ESTIMATES ONLY — NOT LEGAL ADVICE. Consult a licensed personal injury attorney for your specific situation.
Free · Updated 2026 · All 50 States

Workers' Comp Settlement Calculator

Estimate your workers' compensation benefits based on your injury type, weekly wage, and disability classification. Results reflect the standard 2/3 wage replacement formula used across most states.

🦺 Workers' Compensation Settlement Estimator

Select your state and injury classification, then fill in your wage and disability details for an instant estimate.

📍 State & Injury Type

Affects multiplier ±5% based on state benefit generosity

💵 Wage & Disability Details

Gross weekly earnings before injury
Total weeks unable to work at full capacity
Ongoing treatment, surgery, PT, prescriptions
If injury prevents return to prior occupation
🦺

Fill in your details above and click Calculate to see your workers' comp estimate.

⚠️ Estimate only — not legal advice. Attorney fees (typically 33–40%) are not deducted from this figure. Consult a licensed attorney before making any decisions.

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⚖️ Critical Disclaimer — Workers' Comp Varies Enormously by State

Workers' compensation is a state-by-state system with dramatically different benefit rates, maximum weekly benefit caps, impairment rating schedules, and settlement procedures. This calculator uses the standard 2/3 wage replacement formula as a baseline, but your actual benefits may be subject to your state's Maximum Compensable Rate (MCR), scheduled loss of use charts, reopening rights, Medicare Set-Asides (MSA), and structured settlement requirements. These estimates do not constitute legal advice. Consult a licensed workers' comp attorney in your state — most offer free consultations and work on contingency.

Understanding Workers' Comp

The Four Types of Workers' Comp Disability

🕐 Temporary Total Disability (TTD)

You are completely unable to work while recovering. Most states pay 2/3 of your average weekly wage (AWW) during this period, subject to a state maximum. TTD ends when you reach Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) or return to work.

⚖️ Temporary Partial Disability (TPD)

You can return to light duty at reduced wages while recovering. TPD benefits typically make up the difference between your pre-injury wage and your current reduced earnings, calculated at 2/3 of the wage difference.

📋 Permanent Partial Disability (PPD)

Once at MMI, if you have lasting impairment, you receive a PPD rating. Benefits are calculated based on the impairment percentage, a scheduled number of weeks, and your average weekly wage. State schedules vary dramatically.

♿ Permanent Total Disability (PTD)

If your injury permanently prevents you from working any job, PTD benefits may continue for life in many states — typically 2/3 AWW subject to the state's maximum. Some states cap lifetime PTD; others do not.

🏥 Medical Benefits

Workers' comp covers all necessary and reasonable medical treatment related to your injury — including ER care, surgery, physical therapy, prescriptions, and medical equipment. Future medical costs are a key part of any lump-sum settlement.

💡 Lump-Sum Settlements

Many workers' comp cases settle for a lump sum (Compromise & Release). This trades future weekly payments and medical benefits for a single payment. Once you sign, you typically give up the right to reopen your claim.

Get a Free Case Evaluation

Workers' comp claims are notoriously underpaid by insurance carriers. A licensed workers' comp attorney can identify denied benefits and maximize your settlement — usually on contingency.

Find a Workers' Comp Attorney →