
Workers' compensation · Kentucky
Hurt on the job?
Two cases, not one.
Workers' comp pays your medical and a portion of your wages - but it's not your only option. When a third party (a subcontractor, a property owner, a product manufacturer) shares the blame, a separate tort claim runs alongside the comp claim. We coordinate both so nothing's left on the table.
01 · The problem
Comp alone often isn't enough.
The third-party claim is where it gets real.
Kentucky workers' compensation covers medical and a portion of lost wages - and that's it. No pain and suffering. No full wage replacement. No accountability for the third party who caused the injury.
On most serious construction, trades, and trucking injuries, somebody other than your direct employer is partly responsible. A subcontractor cut a corner. A property owner failed to warn. A piece of equipment failed because it was defective.
That third party can be sued separately while you continue receiving comp benefits. We run the two cases in parallel - and the recovery on the third-party side is usually the real money.

02 · Defense playbook, decoded
What the carrier does.
What we do back.
- Their tacticComp carrier wants you back to work fast
- Our counterTreating physician's release controls - not the comp adjuster's preference. We protect the medical opinion.
- Their tacticIndependent medical exam (IME) bias
- Our counterWe prep clients for IMEs. Surprise is the IME doctor's weapon.
- Their tacticComp lien on third-party recovery
- Our counterYes, the comp carrier has a subrogation lien - but it can be negotiated. We routinely cut these in half or better.
- Their tacticThird party hiding behind your employer
- Our counterWorkplace injuries often have layered liability. We map the parties early.
03 · How we handle it
Step by step.
No mystery, no padding.
- 01
Comp + third-party intake.
We screen both claims at the first meeting. Most workplace cases have both.
- 02
Comp benefit coordination.
Make sure medical is approved, TTD checks are flowing, the right specialist is seeing you.
- 03
Third-party investigation.
Scene work, witness statements, equipment inspection if applicable.
- 04
Third-party demand.
Built around the medical, lost-wage differential, and intangibles comp doesn't cover.
- 05
Lien negotiation + close.
We negotiate the comp lien down so the net to you is materially higher.
04 · Where it shows up
Workers' Compensation -
five common shapes.
Common workplace injury scenarios we handle:
- 01
Construction site injuries
Falls, scaffolding, struck-by. General contractors and subs both potentially liable.
- 02
Trade injuries (IBEW, IUOE)
Electrical, operating engineer, ironwork. Third-party liability layered with comp.
- 03
Plant / warehouse
Forklift, machinery, repetitive trauma. Equipment manufacturer claims are common.
- 04
Trucking / dock
Drivers, dockworkers. Often involve trucking-defendant overlap.
- 05
Healthcare / nursing
Patient handling, needlestick, repetitive strain - comp's primary, sometimes third-party.
05 · A case we’ve handled
One file.
Real outcome.
$420K
Workers' Compensation
Third-party liability recovery for an IBEW journeyman in addition to a continuing workers' comp claim.
Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Every case is evaluated on its own facts.
06 · Common questions
Workers' Compensation -
straight answers.
Can I sue my employer?
Generally not - that's the workers' comp tradeoff. But you can almost always sue third parties (other contractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers) who contributed to the injury.
What if my comp claim is denied?
Denials are common and usually appealable. We handle the appeal alongside the third-party case.
Will I lose my job for filing?
Retaliation for filing a comp claim is illegal in Kentucky. If it happens, that's a separate cause of action - and we'll handle it.
Don’t see your question? More on the FAQ page, or just ask us directly.

Workers' compensation · Kentucky
Hurt on the job?
Don't leave money behind.
Comp is just one bucket. Free case review - we'll tell you whether there's a second case underneath the first.