Alabama workers' compensation provides medical care, lost wages, and disability benefits for work-related injuries. Filed through Alabama Department of Labor — Workers' Compensation Division. SOL: 2 years from injury / last benefit.
Published May 6, 2026
## Workers' compensation in Alabama
Workers' compensation is a no-fault system providing medical care, lost wages, and disability benefits to workers injured on the job — in exchange for giving up the right to sue the employer for negligence. Every state except Texas mandates WC coverage for most employers.
### Alabama workers' compensation
- **Agency:** Alabama Department of Labor — Workers' Compensation Division
- **Statute of limitations:** 2 years from injury / last benefit
## What WC covers
**Medical benefits:**
- Doctor visits
- Hospital and surgical care
- Physical therapy / rehabilitation
- Prescription medications
- Durable medical equipment
- Mileage to medical appointments
**Lost-wage benefits:**
- **Temporary Total Disability (TTD)** — usually 2/3 of average weekly wage during recovery
- **Temporary Partial Disability (TPD)** — for partial inability to work
- **Permanent Partial Disability (PPD)** — for permanent impairment that allows some work
- **Permanent Total Disability (PTD)** — for permanent inability to work
- **Death benefits** — to surviving spouse and dependents
**Vocational rehabilitation** in many states for workers unable to return to former job
## What's covered as a "work injury"
Generally:
- **Specific accidents** — falls, machinery, vehicle crashes during work
- **Repetitive stress / overuse injuries** — carpal tunnel, back issues
- **Occupational diseases** — asbestos, hearing loss, chemical exposure
- **Mental-mental injuries** (in some states) — psychological injury without physical trigger
- **Heart attacks / strokes** — only when work-stress was substantial cause
- **Aggravation of pre-existing conditions** — in many states, full benefits if work made it worse
## What's typically NOT covered
- **Self-inflicted injuries**
- **Injuries from intoxication** (with state-specific causation tests)
- **Injuries from horseplay** by the injured worker
- **Commute injuries** ("going-and-coming rule") — with exceptions for travel during work
- **Off-duty injuries** — even if on employer property
- **Self-employed / independent contractors** (with state-specific tests)
- **Domestic workers** (in many states) — limited or excluded
- **Volunteers** (typically) — though some states extend
## How to file
1. **Notify employer** — most states require notice within 30-90 days of injury
2. **Get medical care** — many states require seeing employer-designated doctor first
3. **File claim** with state agency — within state SOL
4. **Complete medical evaluation** — Independent Medical Examination (IME) often required
5. **Receive benefits** OR **dispute denial**
6. **Resolve case** — settlement, lump-sum, or ongoing benefits
## The "exclusive remedy" rule
Workers' comp is the **exclusive remedy** against the employer — meaning you generally can't sue your employer for negligence. EXCEPTIONS:
- **Intentional torts** by employer
- **Third-party defendants** — equipment manufacturer, contractor, vendor — can be sued separately
- **"Dual capacity" exception** — when employer was acting in capacity other than employer
- **Texas non-subscribers** — can be sued for negligence (no exclusive-remedy bar)
Third-party claims often produce significantly larger recovery than WC alone — they're a major focus of injured-worker representation.
## Common disputes
- **Compensability** — was the injury actually work-related?
- **Average weekly wage calculation** — drives all benefit amounts
- **Medical care disputes** — denied treatments, IME conflicts
- **Return-to-work disputes** — light-duty offers, max medical improvement (MMI)
- **Permanent impairment ratings** — drives PPD benefits
- **Settlement / lump-sum approval**
- **Vocational rehab eligibility**
## Settlement
Most WC cases eventually settle. Two types:
- **Stipulation / award with reservation** — defined benefits with rights to medical care continuing
- **Compromise / clincher** — full lump-sum payment closing all rights including medical
Always have an attorney review settlement terms — Medicare set-asides (for older workers), tax implications, and waiver language all matter enormously.
## Retaliation protection
All states (except possibly TX non-subscribers) prohibit retaliation against workers for filing WC claims. Retaliation claims often have:
- **Burden-shifting framework** similar to discrimination law
- **Damages beyond WC** — back pay, front pay, emotional distress, sometimes punitive
- **State-specific anti-retaliation statutes**
## What you should do
If you've been hurt on the job in Alabama: report it to your employer in writing immediately, get medical care (preferably from your employer's panel doctor first to satisfy state requirements), document everything, and consider hiring a workers' comp attorney early. Most Alabama WC attorneys work on contingency (statutorily limited percentages, e.g., 15-25% of recovery) and offer free consultations.
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*This guide is general information about Alabama law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. WC law is highly procedural and varies significantly between states. Talk to a licensed Alabama workers' compensation attorney about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.