The Shortcut That Could Destroy Your Business
A ghost policy is one of the most misunderstood — and dangerous — concepts in South Carolina workers' comp. Some business owners use them intentionally. Others are sold them without fully understanding the risk. This video explains exactly what a ghost policy is, when it fails catastrophically, and why the short-term savings are never worth the long-term exposure.
A ghost policy is a workers' comp policy purchased by a sole proprietor or single-member LLC owner who has formally excluded themselves from coverage. The policy is technically active — it has a policy number and a certificate of insurance can be issued — but it covers zero employees because the only worker (the owner) has opted out. The name comes from the fact that the policy exists on paper but covers no one. Ghost policies are commonly used in South Carolina construction and contracting trades, where general contractors require subcontractors to provide certificates of insurance before work begins. A sole proprietor sub buys the ghost policy, hands over the certificate, and pays a minimal premium. On the surface the GC's requirement is met. In practice, the risk has simply been left unaddressed.
Ghost policies fail when someone gets hurt on the job. If a sole proprietor with a ghost policy is injured while working, their workers' comp policy will not pay — they excluded themselves. Their personal health insurance may also refuse the claim since it was work-related, leaving them with no coverage at all. For the general contractor who accepted the ghost policy certificate, the exposure is even more serious. If the injured sub can demonstrate they were functioning as an employee rather than an independent contractor — which South Carolina courts have found in numerous cases — the GC's policy may be required to cover the claim. This is not hypothetical risk. SC contractors have faced six-figure claims from injured subs operating under ghost policies that were supposed to transfer liability.
South Carolina law does allow certain business owners to exclude themselves from workers' comp coverage. Sole proprietors, partners in a partnership, and officers of closely held corporations can elect to be excluded. The exclusion must be filed formally with the carrier — it is not automatic. Once excluded, the owner is not covered if injured on the job. South Carolina also applies this logic to corporate officers: a corporation with only one officer who excluded themselves technically covers no employees, but many carriers still issue a ghost policy to satisfy certificate requirements. The critical distinction is understanding that a certificate of insurance for a ghost policy does not mean real protection exists for a GC or project owner who accepts that certificate.
Ghost policies are legal in the sense that owner exclusions are permitted under SC law. However, they create significant uninsured liability and are frequently misused to satisfy certificate requirements without providing real coverage. Many carriers now require evidence that subs have actual employees covered, not just a policy with an excluded owner.
Require certificates of insurance that show employees are covered, not just that a policy exists. For sole proprietors or very small subs, consider requiring them to be added to your own policy or verify directly with their carrier that real coverage exists. A workers' comp specialist can build this into your vendor onboarding process.
Yes, potentially. If a court determines the injured sub functioned as an employee, the business owner or GC may face personal liability for the claim. This is why ghost policies are considered a significant risk, not just a paperwork technicality.
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