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North Carolina · NC

Workers Compensation Exemptions North Carolina

North Carolina requires workers' comp for employers with three or more employees. Sole proprietors and partners are exempt but may elect coverage. LLC members are typically excluded. The North Carolina Industrial Commission (NCIC) and North Carolina Rate Bureau (NCLB) oversee the system. Construction subcontractors face significant exemption challenges, and misclassification of workers is a growing enforcement priority.

Workers' comp exemption guidance in North Carolina
Coverage for North Carolina dairies

Workers' comp exemption guidance for North Carolina businesses.

From LLC member exemptions to corporate officer exclusions and independent contractor classification, we know North Carolina's rules inside and out.

North Carolina — FAQ

Workers' comp exemption questions for North Carolina

Workers' comp cost depends on your state, industry, payroll, and claims history. Some business owners qualify for exemptions and pay no premium for themselves. When coverage is required, rates are set per $100 of payroll by job class. We quote your actual situation in about 15 minutes — never a generic estimate.

Yes. Contractors Choice Agency is licensed in all 50 states and provides workers' comp exemption guidance for businesses anywhere in the country — Florida, Texas, California, New York, Georgia, Arizona, Illinois, North Carolina, and every other state.

Typically 15 minutes on a call. We can tell you quickly whether you qualify for an exemption in your state, what needs to be filed, and what the risks are.

We can help you assess the situation, understand your options, and either file the exemption retroactively (if possible) or place the required coverage to stop a stop-work order or avoid further penalties. Bring us your situation and we'll find a path.

It depends on your situation. For working owners with no employees, an exemption saves premium cost but leaves you personally uncovered. For business owners who want protection for themselves, coverage can be better than an exemption. We help you weigh both options honestly.

A.M. Best ratings reflect a carrier's financial strength and ability to pay claims. We place coverage with A-rated carriers so the coverage is actually there when a claim is filed.

In most states, occupational accident insurance cannot legally substitute for workers' comp for employees. However, for truly independent contractors in states that allow it, and for Texas non-subscribers, occupational accident insurance is a common and cost-effective alternative that provides medical and disability coverage for work injuries.

The process varies by state, but generally involves documenting that the contractor satisfies the applicable test (ABC test, economic reality test, or control test) — separate business, multiple clients, control over how work is performed, own tools and equipment. Written independent contractor agreements help but are not sufficient on their own.

Business structure (LLC, S-corp, C-corp, sole prop), state of operation, number and relationship of owners and officers, family members working in the business, 1099 contractors used, current workers' comp situation, and any prior audit findings or compliance issues.

Not automatically. If a contractor is genuinely independent (their own business, their own insurance), your workers' comp does not cover them. If they are misclassified — truly employees working under your direction — your workers' comp may be required to cover them, and if it doesn't, you face personal liability for their injuries.

Seasonal and part-time status does not by itself make someone an independent contractor. The classification depends on the applicable state test — how much control you have over their work, whether they work for other businesses, and whether they have an independently established business. Misclassifying seasonal workers as contractors is a common audit trigger.

A retroactively voided exemption means you are treated as if the person was an employee and should have been covered for the entire period the exemption was in place. This can result in retroactive premium assessments, penalty audits, and — if an injury occurred during the lapsed period — personal liability for the injured worker's costs.

Yes. If you operate through multiple LLCs or corporations, we help you understand which entity each worker belongs to, which exemptions apply to which entities, and how to structure your coverage so there are no gaps between entities.

Yes. The most common scenario is an owner who files an exemption for themselves while carrying workers' comp for their employees. We coordinate both — the exemption filing for the owner and the coverage policy for the team — so there are no gaps.

Workers' comp exemption guidance in North Carolina since 2005

State-specific knowledge, A-rated markets, and 15-minute response. Call 844-967-5247 or request a quote online.