Sioux Falls Workers Comp Lawyer

If you got hurt at work in Sioux Falls, South Dakota workers compensation is the law that decides what you collect and how. This page covers the state board office that handles Sioux Falls claims, the deadlines that void a real case if you miss them, the weekly check South Dakota pays (capped at $1,067.00), settlement values for common injuries, and the moments where calling a workers comp lawyer is worth the consultation.

South Dakota Weekly Benefit Rates

Maximum weekly benefit
$1,067.00
Minimum weekly benefit
$534.00
State average weekly wage
$1,067.00
Notice deadline
3 days

Source: South Dakota DLR Workers' Compensation.

Where to File a Sioux Falls Workers Comp Claim

South Dakota workers comp claims are handled by the South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation, Division of Labor & Management. Sioux Falls workers file with the same agency. The main contact details are below.

South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation, Division of Labor & Management

123 W. Missouri Avenue
Pierre, SD 57501-2291

Phone: (605) 773-3681

Visit the South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation, Division of Labor & Management website

How the Weekly Check Is Calculated for a Sioux Falls Worker

South Dakota pays 66⅔% of your average weekly wage for the weeks you cannot work because of the injury. The check is capped at $1,067.00 per week and floored at $534.00 per week. Sioux Falls sits inside South Dakota, so the same rate applies.

A worked example for a worker earning $1,000 a week:

  1. Pre-injury average weekly wage: $1,000
  2. Two-thirds of that: $666.67
  3. The cap of $1,067.00 does not bite at this wage, so the weekly check is $666.67.

For a worker earning $3,000 a week, two-thirds would be $2,000.00, but the state caps the check at $1,067.00. The amount above the cap is lost.

For the full formula and four worked examples, see How Much Does Workers Comp Pay in South Dakota.

Sioux Falls Workers Comp Filing Steps

  1. Tell your employer in writing within 3 days of the injury. Most denials trace back to late or missing notice. Email or a paper form to a supervisor is fine; verbal notice with no record is risky.
  2. Get medical treatment and tell the provider it is work-related. The provider bills the workers comp carrier, not your health insurance. South Dakota has its own rules about which doctors you can see; ask the front desk on the first visit.
  3. File the formal claim with the South Dakota Department of Labor and Regulation, Division of Labor & Management within 2 years. The clock pauses while the carrier is paying benefits and restarts the moment payments stop.
  4. Wait for the carrier to accept or deny. Weekly checks usually start a few weeks after the claim is filed. If the carrier denies, you get a written notice and you can request a hearing.
  5. Reach maximum medical improvement and resolve the case. The doctor declares MMI when treatment has plateaued. The case then either continues as ongoing PPD or closes with a lump-sum settlement.

When a Sioux Falls Worker Should Call a Workers Comp Lawyer

Not every workers comp case needs a lawyer, and many simple injuries resolve cleanly with the carrier paying weekly checks and medical bills as required. The pattern that does call for a lawyer is more specific: a real dispute that costs the worker money if it is not fought.

The strong-signal moments for hiring counsel:

  • The claim was denied. If the carrier sent a written denial of compensability, treatment, or wage benefits, get a consultation immediately. South Dakota has a hearing process, and the deadline to request a hearing is short.
  • Weekly checks suddenly stopped. Carriers sometimes cut off TTD when their nurse case manager pressures the doctor to release the worker. A lawyer can challenge the cutoff and recover back pay.
  • Surgery was recommended and the carrier is balking. Spinal fusions, joint replacements, and other major procedures attract scrutiny from carriers because of cost. A workers comp lawyer can push for authorization or run the case to a hearing if the carrier refuses.
  • The impairment rating looks low. Impairment ratings drive the value of permanent disability. If the carrier's doctor came in with a rating that does not match what you experienced, a second opinion and a lawyer's leverage can change the number.
  • A settlement is being offered. Signing a workers comp settlement waives rights you cannot get back. A lawyer reviews the Medicare Set-Aside, the open-vs-closed medical question, and the basic math against the South Dakota schedule before you sign.
  • You are close to Medicare eligibility. Medicare Set-Aside arrangements are required when the worker is on Medicare or close to it. Getting the MSA wrong creates real risk to your future Medicare coverage. Lawyers and MSA vendors handle this together.

Most workers comp lawyers in South Dakota take cases on a contingency fee, which means there is no out-of-pocket cost. The fee is a percentage of the recovery, capped by state law. The cost of a consultation is your time, not your money.

For the longer version of this decision, read When to Hire a Workers Comp Lawyer.

Finding a Workers Comp Lawyer in Sioux Falls

CompCharts does not list specific lawyers, run a referral service, or take any payment from law firms. We point you to neutral sources instead.

  • The South Dakota state bar lawyer referral service is the safest neutral starting point. State bars vet referrals and limit fees to a small consultation charge. Search "South Dakota bar lawyer referral".
  • The local legal-aid office may handle workers comp claims for low-income workers. Search "Sioux Falls legal aid".
  • State-bar-certified workers compensation specialists exist in many states. Bar certification is a stronger signal than a "best lawyer" award or a paid directory listing.

Local Context for Sioux Falls Workers

Workers comp is a state-level system, so the rules in Sioux Falls are the same as the rules anywhere else in South Dakota. The local differences come from which board office handles the case, where hearings are physically held, and which medical providers in your area accept workers comp.

Most South Dakota hearings are held at the state agency's nearest regional office. If Sioux Falls is far from the headquarters, ask the claims adjuster which regional office your case is assigned to and whether remote hearings are an option.

Sources

Every figure on this page traces back to the South Dakota statute or the state workers comp board.