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🍽️ Restaurants

Workers' Comp for Restaurants

Class Codes, Injury Risks & How to Control Your Premium

Restaurants are one of the most common businesses in South Carolina, and they face a workers' comp environment that combines frequent small injuries with the occasional serious one. Cuts, burns, slips on wet floors, and back injuries from lifting are the daily claims landscape for restaurant operations. The good news is that restaurant workers' comp is very manageable with the right class code structure, safety practices, and return-to-work program. This video covers the workers' comp issues specific to SC restaurant operations and what you can do to control your costs.

⏱ 6 min 53 sec β–Ά Watch Video
Workers' Comp for Restaurants

What You'll Learn

Which class codes apply to different restaurant employee types and how they affect your premium

The most common workers' comp injuries in SC restaurants and how to reduce their frequency

How your experience mod is calculated for a restaurant operation with frequent small claims

Why front-of-house and back-of-house employees need to be classified separately

The return-to-work strategies that work best for restaurant injury types

Class Codes for SC Restaurant Operations

Restaurant operations in South Carolina typically involve multiple workers' comp class codes depending on the roles of different employees. Kitchen staff β€” cooks, prep workers, dishwashers β€” are assigned to a restaurant or food service class code that reflects the physical nature of the work and the associated injury exposure. Wait staff and bartenders working front-of-house are often assigned to a separate class code with a lower rate. Managers and office employees who perform primarily administrative work can be assigned to lower-rated codes. Accurately separating payroll across these codes β€” and documenting the job duty allocation that supports the separation β€” can produce meaningful premium savings compared to a single-code policy that applies the highest rate to all employees.

High-Frequency Claims and Their Impact on Your E-Mod

Restaurants generate workers' comp claims at a higher frequency than many other industries. Minor cuts, burns, slip and fall injuries, and repetitive strain from kitchen work are common across all segments of the industry. While individual claims may be small in dollar value, frequent claims drive up claim count β€” and claim frequency is a significant factor in experience modification calculations. A restaurant with five $2,000 claims will often see more e-mod impact than a business with one $10,000 claim. This makes injury prevention β€” particularly for the most common restaurant injury types β€” especially important for managing premium in the restaurant sector. Simple interventions like slip-resistant mats, cut-resistant gloves, and burn prevention protocols have direct premium implications.

Return-to-Work Programs for Restaurant Injuries

A formal return-to-work program is one of the most effective premium control tools available to SC restaurant operators. When an injured employee can return to modified duty β€” perhaps hosting, cashiering, or light food prep β€” rather than remaining completely off work, the indemnity portion of the workers' comp claim is reduced or eliminated. Shorter disability periods reduce total claim cost, which reduces e-mod impact over the following three years. For a restaurant, identifying modified duty positions requires some creativity, but most operations can find tasks suitable for an employee with a hand, wrist, or back restriction. Communicating the program clearly to employees and having the documented process ready before an injury occurs is what makes it effective.

Key Takeaways

Frequently Asked Questions

Are tipped employees handled differently for workers' comp in South Carolina?

For workers' comp purposes in South Carolina, the auditable payroll for tipped employees is typically based on their total compensation including tips, not just their base hourly wage. The specific treatment of tips can vary depending on how they are processed β€” pooled tips distributed by the employer are generally included, while cash tips not tracked by the employer may not be. Accurate payroll reporting for tipped employees matters both for premium calculation and for ensuring proper benefit calculations if an injury occurs.

My restaurant has had several slip and fall claims. How do I reduce them?

The most effective interventions for slip and fall prevention in restaurants are consistent use of slip-resistant flooring and mats in high-risk areas (particularly dishwashing areas, in front of ice machines, and near grease traps), non-slip footwear requirements for all kitchen staff, a spill cleanup protocol that is immediate and documented, and regular inspections of walking surfaces. These interventions are low-cost relative to a single lost-time claim, and implementing and documenting them demonstrates to carriers that you are actively managing the risk β€” which can help during underwriting and renewal.

How does a restaurant's workers' comp premium compare to other industries in SC?

Restaurant workers' comp rates in South Carolina are moderate compared to truly high-hazard industries like roofing or tree service, but higher than pure office or retail operations. The exact rate depends on the class codes that apply to your specific operation, your payroll, and your experience mod. A restaurant with a clean loss history and an e-mod below 1.0 will pay meaningfully less per dollar of payroll than a restaurant with frequent claims and an elevated e-mod.

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