Vermont Workers Comp

If you got hurt on the job in Vermont, the state's workers compensation system is the law that decides what you collect and how. This page is the plain-English version of that law. What the weekly check pays, what the statute calls a permanent injury, how long you have to file, who to call, and what the settlement chart actually means. Every number on this page links back to the Vermont statute or the state workers comp board page it came from.

Current Vermont weekly benefit rates

Maximum weekly benefit
$1,839.00
Minimum weekly benefit
$613.00
Effective from
July 1, 2025
State average weekly wage
$1,226.00

Source: Vermont Department of Labor, Workers' Compensation . The Vermont rate changes July 1 each year.

How your weekly check is calculated in Vermont

Vermont pays 66⅔% of your average weekly wage for the weeks you cannot work because of the injury. The check is capped at the state maximum and floored at the state minimum. That sounds straightforward, and at the wage levels most people earn it is. Once your wage is high enough to bump into the cap, the math stops being two-thirds and starts being whatever $1,839.00 works out to.

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. Compare to the state cap of $1,839.00: the cap does not bite at this wage, so the weekly check is $666.67.
  4. Compare to the state floor of $613.00: the floor does not bite either, so $666.67 stands.

For a worker earning $3,000 a week, the math gets cut off by the cap. Two-thirds would be $2,000.00, but the state caps the check at $1,839.00. The amount above the cap is lost.

The four benefit types Vermont pays

Vermont workers comp pays in four buckets, and most claims involve more than one. A claim can sit in TTD for months, transition to PPD when the doctor declares the condition stable, and add a permanent total disability claim on top if the injury prevents any return to work.

Temporary total disability (TTD)
Pays while you cannot work at all because of the injury. Usually two-thirds of your average weekly wage, capped at $1,839.00. TTD ends when you return to work, when the doctor releases you, or when you reach maximum medical improvement.
Temporary partial disability (TPD)
Pays when you can work but only at reduced hours or lighter duties that cut your wages. Vermont pays a share of the wage gap so the loss is cushioned while you recover.
Permanent partial disability (PPD)
Pays once you reach maximum medical improvement and a doctor finds a permanent loss. Vermont uses an impairment rating system to set the number of weeks of PPD you get. The Vermont settlement chart lays this out body part by body part.
Permanent total disability (PTD)
Pays if the injury leaves you unable to work in any reasonably available job. PTD usually runs for life, sometimes capped by retirement age, depending on the Vermont statute.

Deadlines you have to hit in Vermont

Two deadlines do most of the damage in Vermont workers comp claims. Workers who miss them often find out months later, when the insurance company denies the claim and points at the calendar.

  1. Notice to the employer: an unspecified number of days from the date of the injury. Write it down, give a copy to a supervisor, and keep proof you delivered it.
  2. Formal claim filing: 6 years from the date of the injury, or from the last payment of medical or indemnity benefits, whichever is later.

Notice to employer as soon as practicable (21 V.S.A. § 656). Claim for compensation must be filed within six months from the date of injury but may extend up to six years for permanent disability discovered later (21 V.S.A. § 660).

Statute citation: 21 V.S.A. §§ 648, 656, 660

The Vermont workers comp process, step by step

  1. Report the injury to your employer in writing. Use the deadline above. Keep a dated copy. If the employer hands you a form, fill it out and request a copy on the spot. If they do not, send an email so there is a timestamp.
  2. Get medical treatment and tell the provider it is work-related. The provider sends bills to the workers comp carrier instead of your health insurance. Vermont has its own rules about which doctor you can see and when you can switch, so ask at the first visit.
  3. Watch for the carrier to accept or deny the claim. If the claim is accepted, weekly checks start showing up after a short waiting period set by state law. If it is denied, you get a written notice explaining why.
  4. Reach maximum medical improvement. The doctor decides when the condition is as good as it is going to get. The doctor then assigns an impairment rating, and the rating drives the permanent disability award.
  5. Resolve the claim. Vermont resolves claims either through an ongoing benefits award or a lump-sum settlement. Both have tradeoffs. The Vermont settlement chart is the framework most settlements get valued against.

Where you file a Vermont workers comp claim

Vermont Department of Labor, Workers' Compensation Division

5 Green Mountain Drive
Montpelier, VT 05601-0488

Phone: (802) 828-4000

Visit the Vermont Department of Labor, Workers' Compensation Division website

Sources for this page

Every number on this page traces to a public Vermont or federal source.