WORKWARS PRO Logo

Workplace Accident: What to Do First

You were hurt at work. The next 24–48 hours are critical. Every step you take — and every step you skip — directly affects your medical coverage, compensation, and legal protection. Here is the exact sequence.

Start Documenting Your Injury Now
Page Available In: English | Français | Español
Emergency Employee Triage Dispatch (CAN/US/MEX)
1-844-WORKWARS
1-844-967-5927
WORKWARS Verified Legal Partner
Employment Lawyer

Top Employment Firm in Your Area

Loading...

Connecting you to top-rated employment attorneys specialized in workplace injury claims, workers' compensation, and occupational health disputes.

✔ Free Consultation ✔ No Win, No Fee ✔ Dossier Integration
If you are seriously injured — get emergency medical care first. Everything on this page comes after your immediate safety. Call emergency services if needed. Then come back here.

🚨 Immediate Steps — First 24 Hours

1Get medical attention — even if you think it's minor

Go to a doctor, urgent care, or emergency room on the same day as the injury. This is critical for two reasons: your health, and the legal record. A same-day medical visit creates an independent, timestamped record that the injury occurred. Injuries that appear minor often become significant — and a delay in seeking treatment gives employers and insurance companies grounds to dispute that the injury happened at work. Tell the treating doctor specifically that this is a work-related injury.

2Report the accident to your employer — in writing, same day

Most jurisdictions require you to report a workplace injury to your employer within a specific timeframe (as short as 24 hours in some). Report verbally and follow up in writing immediately — text or email is fine. State: the date, time, and exact location of the accident; a description of what happened; the injury sustained; and any witnesses. Keep a copy. Your employer then has their own legal obligation to report to the workers' compensation body.

3Document the accident scene — before anything is moved

If you are physically able, take photos and videos of the scene immediately — the hazard, any equipment involved, the location, and any contributing factors (spills, missing guards, broken equipment). Get the names and contact information of any witnesses. This documentation of the pre-correction scene is often the most valuable evidence in a workers' compensation or safety dispute.

4File a workers' compensation claim directly with the relevant body

Do not rely solely on your employer to file on your behalf. In every jurisdiction covered here, you can file directly. Your employer has a legal obligation to report — but you can also file independently to ensure the claim is registered. See the country-specific information below for the correct body and deadlines.

5Keep all records — medical, financial, communication

🚫 What NOT to Do After a Workplace Accident

🚫 Do not give a recorded statement to your employer's insurer without legal advice

Insurance adjusters are trained to elicit statements that minimize your claim. You are not required to give a recorded statement. Consult a lawyer before agreeing to any recorded interview with the employer's insurance company.

🚫 Do not post about the accident on social media

Employers and insurers routinely monitor injured workers' social media. A single photo of you at a social event while on workers' comp can be used to dispute the severity of your injury. Say nothing publicly about the accident or your condition.

🚫 Do not sign anything from your employer without reading it

You may be asked to sign an incident report, a medical release, or a settlement offer. Read everything carefully. A broad medical release can give the employer access to your entire medical history, not just the accident-related records. A quick settlement offer is almost always less than what you are entitled to.

🚫 Do not accept the employer's first settlement offer without consulting a lawyer

Initial settlement offers in workplace injury cases are almost always lowball figures. A free consultation with a workers' compensation lawyer costs you nothing and can reveal whether you are being significantly underpaid. Most take cases on contingency — they get paid only if you do.

🌎 Workers' Compensation by Country

🇺🇸

United States

🇨🇦

Canada

🇬🇧

United Kingdom

🇫🇷

France

🇲🇽

Mexico

🔍 Top Questions Workers Ask

"My employer is pressuring me not to file a workers' comp claim — saying it will hurt the company. What do I do?"

File the claim. Employer pressure to suppress workers' comp claims is itself an illegal act in every jurisdiction covered here. Document the pressure (write down exactly what was said, when, and who said it) and include it in your claim. In many jurisdictions, this pressure is an unfair labour practice or a safety violation. It also significantly strengthens any retaliation claim if the employer follows through with adverse action.

"My employer says the accident was my fault. Does that affect my workers' comp claim?"

In most jurisdictions — no. Workers' compensation is a no-fault system in the US and Canada, which means you receive benefits regardless of who was at fault. The exception is deliberate self-injury or intoxication. In the UK and France, fault matters more for any additional civil claim beyond the standard benefits, but basic coverage still applies. Document what happened accurately and let the system assess fault separately.

"I reported the accident and now my employer is treating me differently. Is that retaliation?"

Yes — if the adverse treatment (changed hours, negative reviews, demotions, termination) follows your workers' comp claim or injury report, that is likely retaliation and is illegal in every jurisdiction. File a separate retaliation complaint with the relevant safety or labour agency. US workers: OSHA retaliation complaint must be filed within 30 days. The timing and connection between your claim and the treatment change are your strongest evidence.

Workers' Compensation Filing Deadlines

Missing the deadline to file a workers' comp claim can permanently bar your benefits. File immediately — even before you fully understand the extent of your injury.

🇺🇸 USAVaries by State

Typically 30 days to report; 1–2 years to file claim.

🇨🇦 CanadaVaries

CNESST: asap. WorkSafeBC: 1 year. WSIB: 6 months.

🇬🇧 UK3 Years

Personal injury civil claim limitation.

🇫🇷 France24 Hours

Report to employer; employer reports to CPAM in 48h.

🇲🇽 Mexico24 Hours

Employer reports to IMSS. File civil claim within 2 years.

*Always confirm exact deadlines immediately — file before you are fully healed.

Start Your Injury Documentation Now

Use the WORKWARS App to record the accident, symptoms, communications with your employer, and every medical visit — building the timestamped record that your workers' comp claim needs.

Start Using the WORKWARS App

Related Workplace Safety Guides

🚫 Report Unsafe Conditions 🚫 Fired for Refusing Unsafe Work ☀️ Heat Stress Worker Rights 🚨 First 24 Hours After Being Fired 📝 Psychological Harassment at Work ⚖️ Free Legal Aid