What Happens After a Workplace Injury in South Carolina
When an employee gets hurt on the job in South Carolina, the workers' comp claims process begins immediately — and how you respond in the first 24 hours matters more than most business owners realize. This video walks through the full SC claims lifecycle: what to do right away, how the carrier handles the claim, what your obligations are as an employer, and how claims affect your future premium.
What to do immediately after a workplace injury occurs in South Carolina
How to file a workers' comp claim correctly and what documentation is required
The role of the carrier's claims adjuster and what they're evaluating
How SC workers' comp benefits are determined, including medical and wage replacement
The connection between claims frequency and severity and your experience mod
How a return-to-work program reduces claim costs and protects your premium
The first 24 hours after a workplace injury set the tone for the entire claim. SC employers are required to report injuries to their workers' comp carrier promptly — most carriers require notice within 24 hours. Delayed reporting is one of the most common mistakes SC employers make, and it typically results in worse outcomes: the injured employee may seek treatment outside the authorized provider network, the carrier's claims team loses the ability to manage the claim from the start, and the employer's credibility is weakened if there's any dispute later. The right response is to ensure the employee receives appropriate medical attention, gather basic facts about what happened and who witnessed it, and report the incident to your carrier or agent the same day.
South Carolina workers' comp provides two primary benefits to injured employees: medical benefits and wage replacement. Medical benefits cover all reasonable and necessary medical treatment related to the work injury, with no deductible or co-pay to the employee. Wage replacement — called temporary total disability (TTD) — kicks in when the employee is unable to work due to the injury. In SC, TTD pays two-thirds of the employee's average weekly wage, subject to a maximum established by the SC Workers' Compensation Commission. The carrier's claims adjuster is responsible for managing both streams of benefits, authorizing treatment, and evaluating when the employee can return to work. As an employer, your role is to cooperate with the adjuster and provide information they request promptly.
Every workers' comp claim in South Carolina affects your experience modification rate, which in turn drives your future premium. Claims are weighted in the e-mod calculation based on frequency and severity — a pattern of multiple small claims is treated differently than a single large claim, but both have a negative impact. The claims from a given policy year enter the e-mod calculation for the following three years, with a one-year lag. A claim incurred in 2024 will affect your 2026, 2027, and 2028 e-mods. This is why how you manage claims matters as much as preventing them in the first place. Closing claims quickly, getting employees back to work in a modified duty capacity, and avoiding litigation all contribute to lower ultimate claim costs and a better e-mod trajectory.
Report workplace injuries to your carrier within 24 hours — delayed reporting makes claims worse
SC workers' comp covers medical treatment and two-thirds of lost wages for injured employees
The carrier's adjuster manages the claim; your job is to cooperate and provide information promptly
Every claim affects your e-mod for three years — how you manage it matters as much as preventing it
A return-to-work program that gets employees back on light duty reduces claim severity and your e-mod
No. Workers' compensation in South Carolina operates on a no-fault basis. An injured employee is entitled to benefits for injuries arising out of and in the course of employment, regardless of whether the employer was negligent or the employee made a mistake. The employee does not have to prove fault, and in exchange, workers' comp is generally the exclusive remedy — meaning the employee cannot also sue the employer for negligence in most circumstances. There are limited exceptions for intentional acts and for injuries caused by third parties.
Yes. SC employers are required by law to report workplace injuries to their carrier and, in some cases, to the SC Workers' Compensation Commission. Failure to report can result in penalties and can also create significant problems with the claim itself — including disputes about whether the injury is compensable and difficulty managing medical treatment. Employers are also prohibited from retaliating against employees who file workers' comp claims. A pattern of unreported injuries can attract regulatory attention and creates serious legal exposure.
A return-to-work program is a formal policy that allows injured employees to come back to work in a modified or light-duty capacity while they recover, rather than staying home on temporary total disability. From a cost perspective, an employee on light duty earns their regular wages from the employer — which stops the wage replacement clock. Every week an employee is on modified duty instead of TTD reduces the ultimate claim cost, which benefits the employer's e-mod. From a recovery perspective, research consistently shows that injured workers who return to the workplace sooner heal faster and have better long-term outcomes than those who remain at home during recovery.
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