400,000 residents. 100+ golf courses. Millions of annual tourists. Thousands of seasonal workers. One massive workers' comp complexity.
Get Your Quote TodayMyrtle Beach's workforce isn't stable. It swells. May through September, hotels hire 200% more staff. Golf courses bring in seasonal crews. Restaurants and attractions staff up for the rush. Then October comes — payroll collapses.
Most workers' comp policies assume a stable, year-round payroll. You pay a deposit premium. The carrier audits your payroll at year-end. With seasonal staffing, this creates massive discrepancies — overpayments, undercutting, adjustment delays.
Workers get injured during peak season when payroll is high. Your base premium was calculated on low off-season payroll. A major summer injury claim reveals you're under-insured. Claims get denied or delayed due to coverage gaps.
Your workers' comp premium is based on total expected payroll. But most of that payroll happens in 5 months. You're paying a year's premium for a 5-month season. And if claims spike, you have limited recourse.
We identify carriers and policy structures that adjust with your workforce. Instead of guessing, we build coverage that matches reality:
60%
Variation
From winter low to summer peak
5 Months
Peak Season
May through September high demand
$40M+
Seasonal Payroll
Added each summer to county payroll
250+ hotels and resorts. Housekeeping, front desk, maintenance, kitchen staff. Peak season (May-September) hiring is 200%+ of off-season staffing. Needle sticks, slip/falls, back injuries from moving luggage.
24+ championship and public courses. Groundskeeping, maintenance, pro shop, beverage cart staff. Seasonal crew expansion. Injury hazards: machinery, repetitive strain, heat illness in summer.
Hundreds of restaurants and dining venues. Servers, kitchen staff, hosts. Summer season brings double (or more) the staff. Burns, cuts, slip/falls on wet floors, back injuries.
Boardwalk, theme parks, mini golf, water parks. Rides operators, maintenance, admission staff. Summer crowds mean peak staffing. Injury risks include machinery, heat, and guest-related incidents.
Grand Strand is constantly developing. New hotels, condos, retail spaces. Construction crews work year-round but peak during offseason (Oct-April). Multiple contractor and subcontractor relationships.
Grand Strand Medical, Conway Medical Center, clinics, urgent care. Summer tourism brings more ER visits and emergency services demand. Staff injury risks: needle sticks, back injuries, communicable disease exposure.
Myrtle Beach resorts and attractions hire H-2B workers for seasonal positions. These workers come from abroad, work for 10 months, then return home. Coverage questions: Do H-2B workers count toward payroll? What if they're injured?
We ensure H-2B workers are properly covered and classified.
Hotels hire temp staff through agencies for the peak season. Who's responsible for workers' comp — the agency or the hotel? Many businesses assume the agency covers everything, then discover gaps when someone is injured.
We clarify coverage responsibility and fill gaps.
Many businesses misclassify seasonal workers as independent contractors to avoid coverage obligations. Maintenance crews at hotels, beverage cart operators at golf courses. SC law requires proper classification.
We audit classification and recommend corrections.
The Coverage Impact
Myrtle Beach hotels alone employ thousands of seasonal workers from multiple staffing channels. When one of them is injured during peak season, you need coverage that recognizes them as your responsibility. RapidSync audits your entire workforce — direct hire, temp, H-2B, contractors — to ensure you're properly covered.
Atlantic hurricane season (June-November) overlaps Myrtle Beach's peak tourism season. When storms hit, they create immediate emergency repair and cleanup work. Temporary construction crews mobilize fast. Workers' comp coverage for emergency repair work creates unique exposure.
Boarding up windows, securing equipment, moving stock. Increased injury risk from rushing and inadequate equipment. Workers' comp must cover emergency prep activities.
Debris removal, structural repair, facility restoration. Temporary crews brought in. Coverage gaps: Are the temporary crews covered? Who pays for their injuries?
Your facility is damaged. You hire contractors for emergency repairs. Your workers' comp needs to cover your own employees working alongside contractors during crisis mode.
Just north of Myrtle Beach proper. Smaller but growing. Similar hospitality economy with boutique hotels and oceanfront attractions. Many residents commute to MB hotels for work.
Inland, non-tourist focused. Government, healthcare, retail. More stable employment but many Conway residents work seasonal hospitality jobs in nearby Myrtle Beach.
Upscale, quieter beach communities. Golf, dining, vacation rentals. Smaller staffing needs but premium property values mean higher-value construction and maintenance work.
Growing residential and commercial areas. Shopping centers, restaurants, residential construction. Increasing suburban/service-based employment.
Employment hub for airport operations, car rental, ground services, hospitality support. Staffing fluctuates with tourist season.
Entertainment and shopping complex. Restaurants, shops, attractions. Year-round but with seasonal demand spikes tied to tourism.
Standard policies use an annual estimated payroll. With seasonal variation, you overpay in winter and underpay in summer. Better approach: Monthly payroll reporting with premium adjustments. RapidSync identifies carriers that support this model.
No. Even if you hire through an agency, those workers are your employees for workers' comp purposes in South Carolina. The agency carries coverage for their admin/payroll role, but you need coverage for the workers themselves. This is a major gap for many hospitality businesses.
H-2B workers are classified as regular employees for workers' comp purposes. They count toward your payroll. If you hire 50 H-2B workers for the summer, they're in your payroll calculation. This can create significant premium adjustments — we help you understand the impact in advance.
You should be — but only if that employee was properly included in your payroll/coverage. This is why accurate payroll reporting is critical. If your policy shows 10 employees but you actually have 100, a claim might be denied as exceeding the covered payroll. We audit this before it becomes a problem.
Your existing coverage should apply, but you need to notify your carrier immediately when emergency work starts. If you hire temporary contractors for storm repair, those contractors should carry their own coverage. You as the property owner should not be liable for their injuries. We help structure these relationships properly.
With payroll-adjusting policies, your premium is based on actual payroll. Winter months have lower payroll, so you pay less. It's fairer and more accurate than paying a year-round premium for variable work.
Get a workers' comp quote designed for Myrtle Beach's unique payroll patterns—no more overpaying in winter, no more exposure gaps in summer.
Get Your Free Seasonal Quote →