Workplace InjuryUpdated March 2026

Hurt on the Job in Kansas City?

Whether it happened on a construction site, in a warehouse, at an office, or on the road — here's what to do next to protect your health and your rights.

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Key Takeaways

  • Report your injury to your employer in writing within 30 days (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.420) — failure to report within this window can jeopardize your workers' compensation benefits.
  • The statute of limitations to file a workers' comp claim in Missouri is 2 years from the date of injury (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.430); third-party personal injury claims have a separate 5-year deadline (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120(4)).
  • Missouri's pure comparative fault (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.765) applies to third-party claims, meaning your recovery is reduced by your fault percentage but never eliminated — and workers' comp itself is a no-fault system.
  • Kansas City is a major logistics hub at the intersection of I-70 and I-35, driving high injury rates in construction, warehousing, meatpacking, and manufacturing sectors across the metro.
  • Be cautious with the workers' comp insurer — they may try to minimize your injury, deny recommended treatments, or pressure you to return to work before you are ready.
  • Most workplace injury attorneys in Kansas City offer free consultations, and workers' comp attorneys are paid from your award — you pay nothing upfront.
1

Get medical attention immediately

Your health comes first. If you're seriously injured — a fall from height, a crushing injury, a severe burn, an amputation, or any life-threatening situation — call 911 or get to the nearest emergency room. In Kansas City, University Health (Truman Medical Center) at Hospital Hill is the Level I trauma center for the most severe injuries. Saint Luke's Hospital, Research Medical Center, North Kansas City Hospital, and Centerpoint Medical Center in Independence are also options.

For non-emergency injuries, your employer may direct you to a specific doctor or clinic for workers' comp purposes. In Missouri, the employer or their workers' comp insurer generally has the right to select the initial treating physician. However, you also have the right to see your own doctor — though the insurer may dispute coverage for unauthorized out-of-network treatment. If you're unhappy with the employer's chosen doctor, you can request a change of physician through the workers' comp process.

Regardless of where you go, be thorough and honest about how the injury happened. Tell the doctor that the injury occurred at work and describe the incident in detail — what you were doing, how it happened, and what hurts. The medical record created at this visit is the foundation of your workers' comp claim and any potential third-party personal injury claim.

2

Report the injury to your employer within 30 days

Under Missouri law (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.420), you must notify your employer of a workplace injury within 30 days of the accident. Failure to report within this window can jeopardize your workers' compensation benefits.

Report in writing if possible — an email or written notice creates a paper trail. Include the date, time, location within the workplace, a description of how the injury happened, and what body parts were affected. Keep a copy for yourself. If you initially reported verbally, follow up with a written confirmation and note the name of the person you told and the date you told them.

Don't let your employer talk you out of reporting or minimize the injury. Some employers discourage workers from filing claims because it affects their insurance premiums. You have a legal right to report a workplace injury and file a workers' comp claim. Retaliation for filing a workers' comp claim is illegal in Missouri.

3

Understand Missouri workers' compensation

Missouri requires employers with 5 or more employees to carry workers' compensation insurance (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.030). In the construction industry, coverage is required with just 1 employee. The system is administered by the Division of Workers' Compensation under the Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations.

Workers' comp is a "no-fault" system — you don't need to prove your employer was negligent to receive benefits. If you were injured in the course and scope of your employment, you're entitled to benefits regardless of who was at fault. Even if you made a mistake that contributed to the injury, workers' comp still covers you. The only major exceptions are injuries caused by intentional self-harm or intoxication.

In exchange for this no-fault coverage, workers' comp is generally the exclusive remedy against your employer — meaning you typically cannot sue your employer in a separate personal injury lawsuit. However, third-party claims (see Step 5) are a separate matter entirely.

Workers' comp benefits in Missouri include: medical treatment for your injury (the employer or insurer selects the initial treating physician, and all reasonable and necessary treatment is covered), temporary total disability (TTD) payments if you can't work (generally two-thirds of your average weekly wage, subject to a state-set maximum), permanent partial disability (PPD) if your injury results in lasting impairment but you can still work in some capacity, permanent total disability (PTD) if your injury prevents you from ever returning to substantial employment, death benefits for surviving family members if a workplace injury is fatal, and vocational rehabilitation in some cases.

4

File a workers' comp claim — and know the deadlines

Your employer is required to report your injury to their workers' comp insurer. But don't assume they have. You can — and should — also file a Claim for Compensation directly with the Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation. You can reach the Division at (573) 751-4231 or through their Kansas City regional office.

The statute of limitations to file a workers' comp claim in Missouri is 2 years from the date of injury or the last payment of compensation, whichever is later (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.430). Don't wait — filing early protects your rights and starts the process of getting your benefits flowing.

If your claim is denied or disputed — which happens more often than it should — you have the right to a hearing before an administrative law judge at the Division of Workers' Compensation. This is where having an experienced workers' comp attorney becomes critical.

5

Determine if a third-party claim exists — this is where the real money is

While workers' comp is the exclusive remedy against your employer, it does not bar claims against third parties — people or companies other than your direct employer whose negligence contributed to your injury. Third-party claims are regular personal injury lawsuits and can provide compensation for pain and suffering, full lost wages, and other damages that workers' comp doesn't cover.

Common third-party claims in Kansas City workplace injury cases include: motor vehicle accidents on the job (if you were injured in a crash while driving for work — making deliveries on I-70, commuting between job sites on I-435, or driving a company vehicle — you can file a third-party claim against the at-fault driver), defective equipment or machinery (if a machine, tool, forklift, or piece of industrial equipment malfunctioned, the manufacturer may be liable), construction site accidents (if you were injured by the negligence of a general contractor, subcontractor, property owner, or another trade), toxic or chemical exposure, and premises liability (if you were injured at a client's property or a job site owned by someone other than your employer).

Third-party claims follow the 5-year statute of limitations for personal injury (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120(4)) and are subject to Missouri's pure comparative fault rules — meaning even if you're partially at fault, your claim is never barred (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 537.765).

6

Document everything

Keep detailed records of every aspect of your injury and recovery: how the injury happened (write a detailed account while the details are fresh), all medical treatment, appointments, medications, and bills, all communications with your employer, supervisors, and the workers' comp insurer (save emails, letters, and notes from phone calls), time missed from work and any light-duty or restricted work you performed, any restrictions or limitations your doctor places on your activities, your pain levels and symptoms over time (a daily journal is valuable), and any impact on your daily life, relationships, and emotional well-being.

If your employer has you fill out an incident report, keep a copy. If you receive any correspondence from the workers' comp insurer — approvals, denials, benefit calculations, requests for independent medical exams — keep everything organized and accessible.

7

Be cautious with the workers' comp insurer

The workers' comp insurer works for your employer, not for you. Their goal is to minimize the cost of your claim. They may try to minimize the severity of your injury, deny treatments your doctor recommends, send you to an independent medical exam (IME) with a doctor they've selected — who may downplay your injuries or declare you ready to return to work before you actually are, pressure you to return to work too soon, or lowball your disability rating and settlement offer.

You have rights. You can dispute denied treatments, challenge IME findings, request a hearing before an administrative law judge, and negotiate your settlement. An attorney experienced in Missouri workers' comp can help you navigate these disputes and ensure you receive the full benefits you're entitled to.

8

Talk to a workplace injury attorney

If your injury is serious, if your workers' comp claim has been denied or undervalued, if you're being pressured to return to work too soon, or if a third party's negligence contributed to your injury, consult an attorney.

Some Kansas City attorneys handle both the workers' comp claim and the third-party personal injury claim. Others specialize in one or the other. In either case, initial consultations are free, and workers' comp attorneys in Missouri are paid from your award — you don't pay upfront.

An attorney can help you maximize your workers' comp benefits, identify and pursue valuable third-party claims, challenge denied treatments or lowball disability ratings, and represent you at hearings before the Division of Workers' Compensation.

Kansas City Workplace Injury Facts

5+ Employees

Missouri requires workers' comp coverage for employers with 5+ employees (1+ in construction)

Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.030

30 Days

deadline to report a workplace injury to your employer in Missouri

Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.420

2 Years

statute of limitations to file a workers' comp claim in Missouri

Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.430

Major Industries

Kansas City's construction, logistics/warehousing, meatpacking, manufacturing, and healthcare sectors see high workplace injury rates

Industry data

High-risk industries in Kansas City

Kansas City's economy includes several industries with above-average workplace injury rates. The metro is a major logistics and distribution hub — the intersection of I-70 and I-35 makes Kansas City one of the most important freight crossroads in the country, driving significant warehousing, trucking, and distribution activity. Warehouse injuries (falls, crush injuries, forklift accidents, repetitive lifting injuries) are common. The construction industry — fueled by ongoing development downtown, in the Crossroads, the Northland, Lee's Summit, and suburban communities — sees frequent falls from height, struck-by incidents, caught-in/between incidents, and electrocutions. Kansas City has a significant meatpacking and food processing presence, an industry with notoriously high injury rates. The healthcare sector produces injuries from patient handling, needle sticks, slips and falls, and workplace violence. And the metro's manufacturing sector generates machinery-related injuries, chemical exposures, and repetitive stress disorders.

Workers' comp vs. personal injury — what's the difference and why it matters

Workers' compensation provides benefits regardless of fault — but the trade-offs are significant. Workers' comp does not cover pain and suffering, benefit amounts are capped by state formulas (generally two-thirds of your average weekly wage), and the employer/insurer controls many aspects of your medical treatment. A third-party personal injury claim can provide full compensation including pain and suffering, full lost wages (not the reduced workers' comp rate), future earning capacity, and other damages — but you must prove someone other than your employer was negligent. In many Kansas City workplace injury cases, both claims exist simultaneously. For example: if you're a delivery driver injured in a crash caused by another driver on I-70, you receive workers' comp benefits from your employer's insurer AND file a personal injury lawsuit against the at-fault driver. The two claims are separate and handled under different legal frameworks, but together they can provide much more complete compensation than either one alone.

The state line factor in workplace injuries

If you work in Kansas but live in Missouri (or vice versa), the question of which state's workers' comp law applies can be complex. Generally, you can file in the state where the injury occurred, the state where you were hired, or the state where the employer's principal place of business is located. Missouri and Kansas have different workers' comp rules, benefit calculations, and third-party claim rules. If your workplace injury involves the Missouri-Kansas state line, consult an attorney who understands both states' systems.

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Workplace Injury FAQ — Kansas City & Missouri

In Missouri, your employer or their workers' comp insurer generally has the right to select the initial treating physician. However, you can also see your own doctor — though the insurer may dispute coverage for unauthorized treatment. If you disagree with the employer's chosen physician's assessment or treatment plan, you can request a change of physician through the workers' comp process or at a hearing. An attorney can help you navigate this.

If your employer is required to carry workers' comp (5+ employees, or 1+ in construction) and doesn't, you can still file a claim with the Division of Workers' Compensation. The uninsured employer faces penalties, and the state's Uninsured Employer Fund may provide benefits. You may also be able to sue your employer directly in a personal injury lawsuit — the employer's failure to carry required insurance means they don't get the protection of the exclusive remedy doctrine.

Missouri law prohibits employers from retaliating against employees for filing workers' comp claims. If you're fired, demoted, had your hours reduced, or were otherwise disciplined because you filed or pursued a workers' comp claim, you may have a separate retaliation claim that provides additional damages. Document any retaliatory actions — dates, communications, witnesses — and consult an attorney.

Missouri workers' comp provides: medical treatment for your work injury (all reasonable and necessary care), temporary total disability (TTD) payments while you can't work (approximately two-thirds of your average weekly wage, subject to a state maximum), permanent partial disability (PPD) for lasting impairment, permanent total disability (PTD) if you can never return to substantial work, vocational rehabilitation, and death benefits for surviving family members. Workers' comp does NOT cover pain and suffering — that's only available through a separate third-party personal injury claim.

A third-party claim is a personal injury lawsuit against someone other than your direct employer whose negligence caused or contributed to your workplace injury. Common examples: a car accident claim against another driver who hit you while you were working, a product liability claim against the manufacturer of defective equipment, a claim against a general contractor or property owner on a construction site, or a premises liability claim against a client whose dangerous property caused your injury. Third-party claims provide compensation for pain and suffering and full lost wages — benefits not available through workers' comp.

For workers' comp: 2 years from the date of injury or the last payment of compensation (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.430). For a third-party personal injury claim: 5 years (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 516.120(4)). You must report the injury to your employer within 30 days (Mo. Rev. Stat. § 287.420). These deadlines are firm — missing any of them can cost you benefits or legal rights.

Repetitive stress injuries — carpal tunnel syndrome, tendonitis, back injuries from repetitive lifting, hearing loss from prolonged noise exposure — are covered by Missouri workers' comp. The date of injury for statute of limitations purposes is typically the date you knew or reasonably should have known that the condition was related to your work. Report the condition to your employer as soon as you suspect it's work-related, and see a doctor who can document the connection between your job activities and your condition.

Yes. Missouri workers' comp is a no-fault system — your employer's fault or your own fault is irrelevant to your eligibility for benefits. If you were injured in the course and scope of employment, you're entitled to benefits period. The only major exceptions are injuries caused by the employee's intentional self-harm or intoxication. Even if you made a mistake, violated a safety rule, or were careless, workers' comp still covers you.

Workers' comp jurisdiction can be complex when your employment crosses state lines. Generally, you may file a workers' comp claim in the state where the injury occurred, the state where you were hired, or the state where your employer's principal place of business is located. Missouri and Kansas have different rules, benefit formulas, and procedures. An attorney who handles workers' comp in both states can advise you on which state provides the best coverage for your situation.

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InjuryNextSteps.com provides general informational content and is not a law firm. The information on this page does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Every situation is different. Contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship. If you need legal advice, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. The legal information on this page references Missouri statutes and is current as of March 2026 but may change. Always verify deadlines and legal requirements with a qualified attorney.

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