Enter your state, industry, and payroll to get an instant estimate of your workers' compensation insurance cost — no broker call needed.
Workers' compensation insurance premiums are not one-size-fits-all. Your cost depends on four key factors: where your business operates (state), what your employees do (class code), how much you pay them (payroll), and your claims history (experience modifier).
The class code rate is the base cost per $100 of payroll for a specific type of work. Rates are set by state rating bureaus (mostly NCCI) and vary significantly by risk level — a clerical worker costs roughly $0.21 per $100 of payroll, while a roofer can cost $35+ per $100.
| Industry | Class Code | Base Rate / $100 | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clerical / Office | 8810 | $0.21 | Low |
| Outside Sales | 8742 | $0.45 | Low |
| Retail Store | 8017 | $1.28 | Low |
| Restaurant / Food Service | 9082 | $2.85 | Medium |
| Janitorial / Cleaning | 9014 | $5.90 | Medium |
| Landscaping / Lawn Care | 0042 | $9.50 | Medium |
| Trucking / Long Haul | 7231 | $12.50 | High |
| Carpentry (residential) | 5645 | $22.50 | High |
| Roofing | 5551 | $35.20 | Very High |
Workers' comp is regulated at the state level. California, New York, and Illinois have some of the highest rates. North Carolina, Indiana, and Arkansas tend to have lower rates. Four states (North Dakota, Ohio, Washington, Wyoming) operate exclusive state funds — private insurers cannot sell workers' comp there.
Rates shown are national averages. Your actual rate depends on state, experience, and carrier.