Part 4 of 5 - Learn how NCCI class codes, payroll, and your experience modification rate (EMR) determine your workers compensation insurance premium.
Dominic Sylvester
Founder & President
Workers compensation insurance is mandatory in all but a few states, and it's typically the second-largest insurance expense for businesses with employees after property and liability combined. Yet many business owners and CFOs don't fully understand what drives their workers comp costs or what they can do to optimize them.
Unlike some insurance policies where costs seem somewhat arbitrary, workers compensation premiums follow a highly transparent, systematic rating structure. Understanding this structure—particularly class codes and your experience modification rate—is key to managing costs and creating a safer workplace.
Workers compensation premiums are calculated using a straightforward formula:
Annual Premium = (Manual Rate × Payroll) ÷ 100 + Adjustments
But within that simple formula lies significant complexity. Let's break down each component and understand what influences your costs.
Your industry's risk level is the foundation of workers compensation rating. The National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI), or state-specific rating bureaus, maintain classification codes that categorize every type of work by inherent job hazard and injury risk.
The NCCI classification system contains approximately 800 unique class codes. Each code is identified by a four-digit number and describes a specific type of work with similar injury risk characteristics.
Examples of NCCI Class Codes:
Each class code has a manual rate—the baseline workers comp insurance cost per $100 of payroll. These rates vary dramatically based on the occupational hazard:
Sample Manual Rates (vary by state and effective date):
Premium Impact: A roofing company and an office-based company with identical payroll could have a 30-40x difference in workers comp premiums—purely based on class code.
Your insurance company assigns class codes based on:
Critical Point: If multiple types of work are performed in your business, you may have multiple class codes. For example:
While you can't change your basic occupation, accurate class code assignment is crucial:
Once your class codes are assigned, your payroll in each class code determines your base premium calculation.
Manual Premium = (Class Code Rate ÷ 100) × Payroll
Example:
Doubling your payroll doubles your manual premium (assuming the same class codes). A company with $1 million payroll would pay approximately $85,000 using the same class code and before experience modifications.
Payroll must include:
Payroll typically does NOT include:
Critical Point: Payroll is audit-able. Most workers compensation policies are subject to audit after the policy period. An audit verifies that actual payroll matches the reported payroll. Over-reporting creates premium overpayment; under-reporting creates audit findings and potential penalties.
The experience modification rate is where you see the real financial impact of your company's safety record. This is the most controllable factor affecting your workers compensation premium, and it's where significant savings or costs emerge.
Your experience modification rate (E-Mod) is a numerical factor that adjusts your manual premium based on your actual claims experience compared to other businesses in your industry classification.
E-Mod Calculation:
Example 1: Excellent Safety Record
Example 2: Poor Safety Record
Total Impact: The difference between a 0.85 E-Mod and a 1.35 E-Mod on a $50,000 manual premium is $25,000 annually.
The experience modification rate uses three years of claims data:
Timeline Example (for a policy renewing in 2025):
A critical point: Claims frequency matters more than claims severity in E-Mod calculation.
Practical Impact: A company with one $100,000 claim might have a better E-Mod than a company with five $15,000 claims, even though total claims cost is higher. This creates an incentive for prevention (reducing the number of people injured) rather than just managing individual claim costs.
Company size is incorporated into E-Mod calculation because larger companies naturally have more claims due to having more employees. The E-Mod formula normalizes for size, comparing similar-sized companies.
The experience modification rate is where your safety program directly impacts your bottom line:
Prevention-Focused Actions:
Claims Management Actions:
Financial Impact: Companies that implement comprehensive safety programs often achieve E-Mods of 0.70-0.85, compared to industry average of 1.0 and poorly performing companies at 1.25-1.50.
Beyond class codes, payroll, and E-Mod, other factors can influence your workers comp premium:
Most policies are subject to annual audit verifying that actual payroll matched reported payroll. Audit adjustments can increase or decrease your premium if actual payroll differed from estimated payroll.
Some underwriters apply adjustments for individual claims exceeding certain thresholds.
Some insurers offer credits for:
Company Profile:
Calculation:
Office Management: 40 employees × $35,000 salary = $1,400,000 payroll
Carpentry: 25 employees × $55,000 salary = $1,375,000 payroll
Heavy Equipment: 10 employees × $65,000 salary = $650,000 payroll
Total Manual Premium: $6,300 + $65,313 + $44,525 = $116,138
E-Mod Adjustment:
Savings vs. Manual: $9,291 annually due to excellent safety record
Workers compensation premiums follow a logical system: classification codes establish the baseline, payroll determines the volume, and your experience modification rate rewards or penalizes your safety performance.
While your industry classification is fixed, your experience modification rate—determined by your company's actual safety performance—is entirely within your control. Companies that invest in safety don't just prevent injuries; they achieve measurable premium savings through lower E-Mods. A well-executed safety program pays for itself through insurance cost reduction alone.
Next in the Series: Professional Liability Insurance: Rating Factors for Service-Based Businesses
Ready to understand your workers comp rating better? The Volare Risk Management team can analyze your class codes, payroll, and E-Mod to identify opportunities for cost optimization and safety improvement.
Founder & President
Experienced financial services professional with extensive experience in commercial insurance and risk management. As a former family office executive, Dominic has a deep understanding of the needs of institutional investors, their capital providers, and the challenges they face.
Understand how insurers calculate premiums and the key factors that drive your insurance costs across different policy types. A practical guide for business leaders.
Part 2 of 5 - Explore the six primary rating factors that insurers use to calculate general liability premiums, including classification codes, revenue, location, and loss history.
Part 3 of 5 - Learn the COPE method (Construction, Occupancy, Protection, Exposure) that underwriters use to rate commercial property insurance and determine your building's premium.
Part 5 of 5 - Understand the key rating factors for professional liability (errors & omissions) insurance including revenue, claims history, and industry-specific risk.
Part 6 of 9 - Understand how insurers rate cyber insurance based on security controls, industry risk, data sensitivity, and cybersecurity frameworks.