Workers' compensation in Northern Kentucky and Greater Cincinnati — explained clearly. Which system covers you, how to file, local office hours, deadlines you can't miss.
Where you were working when injured determines which state's system applies — not where you live. Cross-border workers, this matters.
| Insurance model | Private carriers — employer buys from open market |
|---|---|
| Mandatory coverage | 1+ employee (virtually no exceptions) |
| Report injury by | Immediately to employer; written notice within 2 years |
| File claim form | Form 101 — Application for Resolution of Injury Claim |
| File claim with | KY Department of Workers' Claims (Frankfort) |
| Online filing | Yes — with attorney representation only |
| Wage replacement | ⅔ average weekly wage (TTD/PTD) |
| Choose your doctor? | Yes — employer may require MCP network |
| Denial appeal window | 30 days from denial notice |
| Governing law | KRS Chapter 342 |
| Insurance model | State fund (BWC) — most employers pay into state pool |
|---|---|
| Mandatory coverage | 1+ employee (public & private) |
| Report injury by | Immediately to employer; file claim within 1 year |
| File claim form | FROI-1 — First Report of Injury (online at BWC.ohio.gov) |
| File claim with | Ohio BWC — online portal or local service office |
| Online filing | Yes — no attorney required |
| Wage replacement | 72% of average weekly wage (first 12 weeks), then ⅔ |
| Choose your doctor? | Must use BWC-certified provider |
| Denial appeal window | 14 days from Industrial Commission order |
| Governing law | ORC Chapter 4123 |
Notify your supervisor or HR as soon as possible after the injury. Get it in writing if you can. Kentucky law requires your employer to file a First Report of Injury (Form IA-1) with their insurance carrier within 3 working days. Ask for a copy.
Go to any emergency room or urgent care immediately for emergencies. For non-emergencies, you may choose your own physician in Kentucky — but if your employer has a Managed Care Plan (MCP), you may need to use a network provider. Tell your doctor this is a work injury; they bill the insurance carrier, not you.
Your employer is legally required to post their workers' comp carrier's name, policy number, and contact information in the workplace. If you can't find it, ask HR or check the KY DWC's online Verification Tool at KY Coverage Lookup.
If your employer or their insurer denies your claim, delays benefits, or ignores you, file Form 101 — Application for Resolution of Injury Claim with the Kentucky Department of Workers' Claims. With an attorney, you can file online. Without one, mail to: KY DWC, 657 Chamberlin Ave., Frankfort, KY 40601. An Administrative Law Judge will be assigned based on your county.
Download KY DWC Forms →If your Form 101 proceeds, a Benefit Review Conference (BRC) is scheduled — an informal proceeding before an Administrative Law Judge. You'll sit across from your employer's insurance company representatives and attorneys. Having your own attorney is strongly recommended at this stage.
You have 30 days from the ALJ's order to appeal to the Workers' Compensation Board. A second appeal goes to the Kentucky Court of Appeals. Do not miss the 30-day window — it is a hard cutoff.
Tell your supervisor immediately. In Ohio, the BWC recommends submitting your own claim online within 24 hours if possible. Your employer should also file a First Report of Injury, but don't wait on them — file your own claim directly.
Go to bwc.ohio.gov and file the First Report of Injury (FROI-1) online — no attorney required. You'll need: date of injury, description of how it happened, part of body injured, your employer's BWC policy number (ask HR), and treating physician info.
File Ohio Claim Online →Unlike Kentucky, Ohio requires you to use a BWC-certified medical provider — your regular doctor may not qualify. Use the BWC Provider Lookup to find certified providers near you. Seeing an uncertified provider may result in bills not being covered.
The BWC will notify you of their decision. If allowed, your employer (or the state fund) begins paying benefits. Temporary Total Disability (TTD) is paid at 72% of your average weekly wage for the first 12 weeks, then drops to ⅔.
Ohio's appeal window is only 14 days from the order. File with the Ohio Industrial Commission (IC). A hearing will be scheduled. The IC is separate from the BWC — it's the neutral adjudicating body.
Ohio Industrial Commission →If the IC rules against you, you can appeal to the Court of Common Pleas in the county where the injury occurred. For Hamilton County injuries, that's the Hamilton County Common Pleas Court in Cincinnati. You have 60 days from the IC order to file the appeal.
Estimate your weekly wage replacement benefit. This is an estimate only — actual benefits depend on your injury classification and state determination.
Weekly benefit amounts are subject to state maximums. KY 2024 maximum TTD: $1,173.56/week. OH 2024 maximum TTD: $1,254.00/week. Consult an attorney for an accurate assessment.
Kentucky DWC claims are handled through Frankfort HQ and local ALJ offices. Ohio BWC has regional service offices — the Cincinnati district serves NKY cross-border workers too.
Northern Kentucky and Cincinnati have high concentrations of logistics, manufacturing, healthcare, and construction workers. These are the injury types most commonly filed in this region.
CVG Airport corridor, Amazon Fulfillment, UPS/FedEx hubs. Most common: back injuries from lifting, forklift accidents, repetitive strain. KY has major logistics employers — know your MCP network before getting hurt.
Toyota Georgetown (beyond NKY), Boone County industrial parks, Kenton County manufacturers. Most common: hand/finger injuries, machine entanglement, chemical exposure, hearing loss claims.
Active construction across I-71/75 corridor and Cincinnati development. Most common: falls from height, nail gun injuries, electrocution. Subcontractors: verify which general contractor's policy covers you.
St. Elizabeth system, UC Health, Mercy Health. Most common: patient-handling injuries, needle sticks, slip and falls. Healthcare employers are frequently self-insured — claims go to their internal TPA.
I-71/I-75 corridor generates high trucker density. Most common: loading dock injuries, MVAs while on duty, back injuries. Cross-state truckers: the state where the accident happened typically governs your claim.
High turnover industry, often underinsured employers. Most common: burns, cuts, slip and falls. Always verify your employer has active workers' comp coverage using the KY or OH online verification tool before assuming you're covered.