ACORD 130 Form – Workers Compensation Application PDF
Workers Compensation Application
Fillable ACORD 130 Workers Compensation Application – report employee payroll, job class codes, prior claims, and multi-state requirements.
Form Type: WC Application
Edition: 2017/05
Category: Workers Compensation
Pages: 04
Download ACORD 130 Form
Free fillable PDF – Current edition
What is the ACORD 130 Workers Compensation Application?
The ACORD 130 form is the standardized workers compensation insurance application used to apply for coverage that protects employees injured on the job and shields employers from lawsuits. This comprehensive 4-page application collects critical information including employee classifications, payroll by class code, business operations, loss history, experience modification factors, and state-specific workers comp requirements that carriers use to underwrite and price coverage.
Workers compensation insurance is legally required in virtually every state for businesses with employees. The workers comp application serves as the foundation for obtaining this mandatory coverage, providing insurers with the detailed payroll and classification data necessary to calculate accurate premiums based on the risk level of different job functions within your organization.
Why Workers Compensation Insurance is Mandatory
Workers compensation exists because of the “grand bargain” between employers and employees:
🏭 What Employers Get
- Lawsuit Protection: Employees cannot sue for workplace injuries (with rare exceptions)
- Predictable Costs: Insurance premium instead of unpredictable jury awards
- Defense Coverage: Insurer handles claims and disputes
- Avoid Bankruptcy: Multi-million dollar injury claims don’t destroy business
👷 What Employees Get
- Guaranteed Medical Care: All medical expenses covered regardless of fault
- Wage Replacement: Typically 66% of wages while unable to work
- No Need to Prove Fault: Benefits paid even if employee caused injury
- Faster Payment: No lengthy lawsuits required
What the ACORD 130 Application Covers
The workers compensation application addresses three main coverage parts:
Part 1 – Workers Compensation (State Coverage):
Mandatory benefits required by state law for employee injuries:
- Medical Benefits: All reasonable medical expenses (no limits in most states)
- Disability Benefits: Wage replacement for temporary or permanent disability
- Death Benefits: Payments to dependents if employee dies from work injury
- Vocational Rehabilitation: Retraining for employees who cannot return to same job
Part 2 – Employer’s Liability:
Coverage when employee sues outside state workers comp system:
- Each Accident: Typically $100,000 – $1,000,000 per occurrence
- Disease – Each Employee: Limit for occupational disease per employee
- Disease – Policy Limit: Aggregate limit for all occupational disease claims
Part 3 – Other States Insurance:
Coverage for employees who work in multiple states not listed on the policy.
⚠️ Penalties for Not Having Workers Comp
Operating without required workers compensation insurance carries severe consequences:
- Fines: $1,000 – $10,000+ per day without coverage
- Criminal Charges: Misdemeanor or felony in many states
- Business Shutdown: State can issue stop-work order closing your business immediately
- Personal Liability: You’re personally liable for 100% of employee medical bills and lost wages (no cap)
- Employee Lawsuits: Employees can sue for full damages when no workers comp coverage exists
- Contract Violations: Most contracts require proof of workers comp – lose projects/clients
When You Need the Workers Compensation Application
The workers comp application is required whenever you hire employees and need to comply with state mandatory coverage laws.
Who Must Complete the ACORD 130 Fillable Form
✅ Businesses That NEED Workers Comp
- ANY business with employees (in 49 states – Texas exempt)
- Corporations with employee-officers
- LLCs with employee-members
- Partnerships with employee-partners
- Nonprofits with staff
- Farms with regular hired help
- Construction contractors
- Restaurants and retail
- Professional services with employees
❌ May NOT Need Workers Comp
- Sole proprietors with no employees (self-employed)
- Independent contractors (use 1099 workers only)
- Businesses in Texas (voluntary)
- Very small employers in some states (under 3-5 employees)
- Some agricultural operations (varies by state)
- Domestic workers in private homes (some states)
Note: Requirements vary significantly by state. Consult your state’s workers comp authority or insurance agent.
Common Situations Requiring the Workers Comp Application
- Hiring First Employee: The moment you hire your first employee, workers comp becomes mandatory in most states. Complete the application immediately.
- New Business Formation: Starting business with employees requires workers comp coverage before operations begin.
- Contract Requirements: General contractors require subcontractors to provide proof of workers comp before working on job sites.
- License Requirements: Many professional licenses (contractors, electricians, plumbers) require active workers comp to maintain licensure.
- State Audit: State workers comp authorities audit businesses randomly. Those without coverage face penalties.
- Employee Request: Employees may request proof you have workers comp coverage.
- Switching Carriers: Moving to different insurance company requires new workers compensation application.
- Business Expansion: Opening locations in new states requires updated workers comp application for multi-state coverage.
💡 When Coverage Should Start
BEFORE your first employee works their first hour. Workers comp coverage must be in place from day one of employment. Many businesses make the mistake of thinking they can wait until after the first payroll or first month. This is wrong and illegal.
Timeline: Start the workers compensation application process 1-2 weeks before hiring employees to ensure coverage is bound and active on their first day.
Experience Modification Factor (Experience Mod)
The Experience Modification Factor (Mod) is a critical number on the workers compensation application that adjusts your premium based on your company’s actual loss history compared to similar businesses.
How Experience Mod Works
Base Mod: 1.00 (average claims experience for your industry)
- Mod below 1.00 (e.g., 0.85): Fewer/smaller claims than industry average = 15% premium discount
- Mod above 1.00 (e.g., 1.25): More/larger claims than industry average = 25% premium surcharge
Real Premium Impact:
|
Base Premium |
Exp Mod |
Final Premium |
Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
|
$50,000 |
0.75 |
$37,500 |
Save $12,500 |
|
$50,000 |
1.00 |
$50,000 |
No change |
|
$50,000 |
1.50 |
$75,000 |
Pay $25,000 more |
How Experience Mod is Calculated
Your state’s rating bureau (NCCI in most states) calculates your mod annually using:
- Your Actual Losses: All workers comp claims paid/reserved over past 3 years (excluding most recent)
- Expected Losses: What’s statistically expected for business of your size and class codes
- Primary vs Excess Losses: Small frequent claims hurt more than one large claim (formula weighs frequency heavily)
Formula (simplified): Mod = (Actual Losses ÷ Expected Losses)
How to Complete ACORD 130 Form
📋 Gather First (Save 2+ Hours)
Business Info
- Federal Tax ID (FEIN)
- All location addresses
- Entity formation docs
- Prior workers comp policy
Employee Info
- Job descriptions by role
- Estimated annual payroll by position
- Employee count (full/part-time)
- Owner/officer details & duties
Claims History
- 5-year loss runs (request from current carrier)
- Experience mod letter
- Prior policy numbers
Operations Details
- Detailed business description
- Subcontractor certificates of insurance
- Out-of-state work states
⚡ 5-Step Completion Process
Step 1 of 5: Company Basics (5 minutes)
Page 1, Top Section
- Enter legal business name (exactly as on tax returns)
- Entity type, FEIN, address, contact info
- List all physical locations with addresses
💡 Pro Tip: Have W-9 form handy – contains all required tax info.
Step 2 of 5: Owner/Officer Decisions (10 minutes)
Page 1, Bottom Section – Critical Choice
For each owner/officer, decide: Include or Exclude?
✅ Include If:
- Performs ANY manual work
- Works in field occasionally
- Operates equipment/tools
- Contract requires coverage
❌ Exclude If:
- Purely admin/desk work
- Want to save premium
- State allows exclusions
- Accept zero coverage if injured
💡 Pro Tip: When in doubt, include. Excluding = no coverage = personal liability for injuries.
Step 3 of 5: Payroll by Class Code (30 minutes) – Most Important
Page 2 – Rating Worksheet
Break down employees by what they actually do:
- Group similar jobs together
- All office staff → One class code
- All field workers → One class code
- Supervisors → Separate code
- For each group, determine:
- Class code (ask agent if unsure)
- Total annual payroll for this group
- Number of employees
- Agent calculates rate × payroll = premium
Common Classifications Quick Reference:
- Office/Clerical → 8810 (lowest rate)
- Outside Sales → 8742
- Supervisors → Varies by industry (usually lower than labor)
- Manual Labor → Industry-specific (get from agent)
💡 Pro Tip: Use realistic payroll estimates. Underestimate = huge audit bill. Overestimate = cash tied up unnecessarily.
Step 4 of 5: Business Questions (15 minutes)
Page 3 – Answer All Questions Honestly
Key questions requiring “YES” explanations:
- Subcontractors used? → List percentage, attach their certificates
- Work above 15 feet or underground? → Describe activities
- Employees travel out of state? → List states and frequency
- Written safety program? → Describe program elements
Loss History: Attach 5-year loss runs from current carrier. Don’t try to hide claims – carriers verify in databases.
💡 Pro Tip: “No” answers need no explanation. Only explain “yes” answers.
Step 5 of 5: Final Questions & Sign (10 minutes)
Page 4 – Wrap Up
- Answer remaining underwriting questions (health plans, bankruptcy, etc.)
- Owner/officer/partner must sign (not regular employee)
- Initial privacy notice acknowledgment
- Agent co-signs
⏱️ Total Time Investment
|
If You Have… |
Completion Time |
|---|---|
|
All documents ready, agent helping |
45-60 minutes |
|
Need to gather payroll records, loss runs |
2-3 hours |
|
Complex multi-state, many class codes |
4-6 hours (spread over days) |
🚀 After Submission
What happens next:
- Day 1-3: Carrier reviews application, may request additional info
- Day 3-7: Underwriting decision (approve, decline, or request more details)
- Day 7-10: Quote issued with final premium
- Day 10-14: Policy binds after deposit payment
Download ACORD 130 Workers Compensation PDF
Complete your workers comp application with accurate payroll, employee classifications, and coverage details
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need workers comp if I’m the only employee (sole proprietor)?
Generally no. Most states don’t require sole proprietors to cover themselves. However, exceptions exist: some states mandate coverage for specific industries (construction in some states), and you may want voluntary coverage for injury protection. Additionally, many contracts require proof of workers comp even for sole proprietors.
What happens during the ACORD 130 workers comp audit?
At policy end, carrier audits your actual payroll vs estimated payroll reported on the ACORD 130 application. Auditor requests: payroll records (W-2s, 1099s, quarterly tax filings), general ledger, certificate of insurance files for subcontractors. They verify payroll amounts and proper classification. If actual payroll higher than estimate, you owe additional premium. If lower, you get refund.
How do I get my workers comp class codes for ACORD 130?
Your insurance agent determines appropriate class codes based on employee duties. They reference NCCI’s Scopes Manual (or state-specific manuals) which describes hundreds of classifications. Provide detailed description of what each employee actually does, and agent assigns proper codes.
Can I exclude myself (owner) from workers comp coverage?
Depends on state and entity type. Most states allow corporate officers and LLC members to exclude themselves. Partnerships and sole proprietors typically cannot be excluded in states that require coverage. To exclude, you must document the exclusion on the workers compensation application. If excluded and injured, you have zero coverage – no medical, no wage replacement.
What if I hire employees after the policy starts?
They’re automatically covered from day one of employment. You must notify your carrier and report their payroll. At year-end audit, their payroll is included in actual payroll calculation and premium adjusted accordingly. Don’t delay reporting – coverage issues can arise if carrier unaware of significant staffing changes.
Do I need separate workers comp policies for each state?
Usually no. Most workers comp policies can cover multiple states on one policy. List all states where employees work on the ACORD 130 form. Each state’s payroll is rated at that state’s rates. Monopolistic states (WA, WY, ND, OH) require coverage through state fund for employees working in those states.
What is NCCI and why is it on the workers comp application?
National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) is the organization that develops class codes, calculates experience mods, and maintains loss databases for most states. Your NCCI Risk ID number connects your company to your loss history in their system. This number follows you even when changing carriers.
How long does it take to get workers comp coverage?
Simple risks: 1-3 business days. Complex risks or poor loss history: 1-2 weeks. Assigned risk: 2-4 weeks. Start the workers compensation application early – you MUST have coverage in place before employees work their first hour.
Can I cancel workers comp if I terminate all employees?
Yes, but you must formally notify carrier and request cancellation. You cannot simply stop paying and assume coverage ends. File proper cancellation notice. If you rehire employees in future, you need new workers compensation application and coverage before they start work.