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Labor & employment
Wisconsin · Workers’ compensation

Filing a workers’ comp claim in Wisconsin.

Administered by the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development, Worker's Compensation Division. Primary form: WKC-12 — Application for Hearing.

Reporting deadline
30 days from date of injury (notify employer)
Filing deadline
2 years from date of injury or last benefit; 12 years for occupational disease
Waiting period
3 days, retroactive after 7 days

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Wisconsin State Board

Agency
Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development, Worker's Compensation Division
Primary claim form
WKC-12 — Application for Hearing

Deadlines at a glance

Reporting deadline

30 days from date of injury (notify employer)

Report to your employer first. Put it in writing — email, text, or signed letter. Missing this window can reduce or eliminate benefits.

Filing deadline

2 years from date of injury or last benefit; 12 years for occupational disease

File WKC-12 — Application for Hearing with the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development, Worker's Compensation Division before this window closes.

Waiting period for income benefits

3 days, retroactive after 7 days

Medical benefits typically begin immediately. The waiting period applies to wage-replacement (TTD/TPD) benefits only.

Wisconsin-specific notes

Wis. Stat. § 102.17.

Federal programs that may apply

The Wisconsin program covers most private-sector workers. Three federal programs run in parallel for specific worker categories:

  • FECA — Federal Employees’ Compensation Act. Covers civilian federal employees. Filed through the US DOL, Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs.
  • LHWCA — Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act. Covers maritime workers (longshoremen, shipbuilders, harbor workers) on navigable US waters.
  • Jones Act — 46 U.S.C. § 30104. Covers seamen injured in the course of employment. Provides a negligence cause of action and maintenance and cure rights outside the state WC system.

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Disputed claims, denial appeals, permanent disability ratings, and third-party tort claims alongside workers’ comp require sustained documentation. SynthCounsel’s Case Pass gives you unlimited documents, deadline tracking, and AI-assisted brief building for 12 months.

Workers’ comp guides for other states

This is general information, not legal advice. Workers’ compensation rules change frequently. Confirm the current form, deadlines, and benefits framework with the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development, Worker's Compensation Division or a licensed Wisconsin attorney before filing.