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National Workers Comp Authority

The National Workers' Compensation Authority insurance services provider network maps the full ecosystem of carriers, program structures, service providers, and compliance resources relevant to workers' compensation in the United States. Each provider category corresponds to a defined function within the workers' comp coverage lifecycle — from policy placement and premium calculation through claims administration, medical management, and settlement. The provider network serves employers, risk managers, brokers, and HR professionals who need to locate, compare, and evaluate service providers against specific operational and regulatory requirements.


How to use this resource

The provider network is organized around functional categories rather than alphabetical providers or geography. A user seeking information on policy structure should begin with the Workers' Comp Policy Types reference, which defines the boundaries between guaranteed-cost programs, large-deductible structures, retrospective rating plans, and captive arrangements. A user evaluating carriers should consult the Workers' Comp Insurance Carriers section, which distinguishes admitted carriers from non-admitted surplus-lines markets and identifies the role of state-assigned risk mechanisms.

Navigation follows a layered logic:

Each category page names the relevant regulatory body — for example, the National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) for premium rating in the 38 jurisdictions where NCCI serves as the licensed rating bureau, or independent state rating bureaus such as the California Workers' Compensation Insurance Rating Bureau (WCIRB) or the New York Compensation Insurance Rating Board (NYCIRB) where applicable. For a structured orientation to the coverage landscape before browsing providers, the Workers' Comp Insurance Services Overview provides foundational context.


Standards for inclusion

Providers and referenced providers must meet a defined threshold of operational legitimacy. The provider network applies the following inclusion criteria:

The provider network distinguishes between admitted markets (carriers licensed by the state insurance commissioner and subject to rate and form filing requirements) and non-admitted surplus-lines markets (which operate outside standard rate regulation but may serve high-hazard or hard-to-place risks). This distinction matters because the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) Nonadmitted and Reinsurance Reform Act of 2010 (NRRA), incorporated under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, establishes the home-state rule for surplus-lines tax allocation — a compliance variable affecting multi-state employers.


How the provider network is maintained

Provider Network content is reviewed on a structured cycle aligned with two external calendars: the NCCI annual loss cost filing cycle (typically effective January 1 or April 1 in participating jurisdictions) and state legislative sessions that produce changes to workers' compensation statutes or benefit schedules. When a state adopts revised loss costs, pages referencing that state's rating environment — including Workers' Comp Premium Calculation and Experience Modification Rate Explained — are flagged for review and updated to reflect the new effective rates.

Regulatory changes that affect inclusion criteria — such as a state adopting new self-insurance solvency requirements or an NCCI circular letter modifying classification definitions — trigger a targeted review of affected provider categories. The Workers' Comp Class Codes section, for instance, reflects NCCI's Scopes® of Basic Manual Classifications, which NCCI updates through a formal classification revision process subject to state regulatory approval.

Providers identified as having had licensure actions, insolvency proceedings, or market withdrawals are removed from active providers and, where appropriate, noted in relevant state-specific coverage-gap documentation. The Workers' Comp Coverage Gaps resource documents scenarios where employer coverage lapses due to carrier withdrawal or administrative failure.


What the provider network does not cover

The provider network does not function as a claims adjudication resource, a legal referral service, or a benefit eligibility determination tool. The following categories of content fall outside the provider network's defined scope:

For a full index of topics covered within the network's scope, the Insurance Services Providers page provides a categorized entry point across all 60-plus subject areas.

This site is part of the Professional Services Authority network.

Live network data

US Workplace Fatalities (BLS CFOI 2023)

5,283

total fatalities · 3.5 per 100k FTE · -3.7% YoY

Top fatal events

Transportation incidents: 1,942

Falls/slips/trips: 885

Violence/other: 740

Contact with objects: 738

Exposure to harmful substances: 814

Nonfatal Injuries (BLS SOII 2023)

2.6M

recordable cases · 2.4 per 100 FTE · 884K days-away cases · avg 8 days away

Workers' Comp Benefits (NASI 2022)

$65.0B

benefits paid · $99.0B employer costs · 144.0M covered workers · 99.0% of US workforce

Top 10 most-dangerous occupations

RankOccupationFatality rate / 100k FTE
1Logging workers98.0
2Roofers56.7
3Aircraft pilots & flight engineers46.8
4Helpers, construction trades45.6
5Refuse & recyclable material collectors35.6
6Driver/sales workers & truck drivers28.3
7Underground mining machine operators27.9
8Farmers, ranchers & agricultural managers23.8
9Structural iron & steel workers23.7
10Construction laborers22.0

Source: BLS CFOI 2023 + BLS SOII 2023 + NASI Workers' Compensation 2024 Report (covering 2022)

Aggregated 2026-04-30T11:32:42Z