San Francisco Workplace injury Lawyer Help

LAST REVIEWED JULY 4, 2026 · CALIFORNIA

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What should I do after getting injured at work in California?

After a workplace injury in California, get medical care and report the injury to your employer as soon as you can, since late reporting can complicate a claim. Workers' compensation generally covers work injuries regardless of fault, including medical treatment and partial wage replacement while you recover. In some situations you may also have a separate claim against someone other than your employer, such as a negligent driver, a property owner, or the maker of defective equipment. Keep copies of everything, and consider speaking with an attorney if your claim is disputed or your injury is serious.

What to do after a workplace injury in San Francisco

  1. Get medical attention and tell the provider clearly that the injury happened at work.
  2. Report the injury to your employer promptly and ask for a workers' compensation claim form.
  3. Complete and return the claim form, and keep a copy of everything you submit.
  4. Write down how the injury happened, including any equipment, conditions, or people involved.
  5. Get names of coworkers who witnessed the incident or knew about the hazard.
  6. Keep records of all medical visits, work restrictions, and missed time.
  7. Consider speaking with an attorney if your injury is serious, your claim is disputed, or a third party may be at fault.

When to speak with an attorney

Common injuries

Evidence checklist: workplace injury

0/8

Check off what you already have. Missing items are normal — attorneys can help track records down.

Local context: San Francisco, San Francisco County

Before you talk to the insurance company

What the intake will ask you

  • Where you work and how the injury happened.
  • When you reported the injury and whether a claim form was filed.
  • What injuries you have and what treatment you have received.
  • Whether anyone besides your employer may have contributed to the injury.
  • Whether the workers' comp insurer has contacted you or disputed anything.
  • Whether you already have an attorney and your preferred contact method.

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Common questions

Can I be fired for filing a workers' compensation claim?

California law prohibits employers from retaliating against workers for filing or intending to file a workers' comp claim. Retaliation can include firing, demotion, or cutting hours. If you believe this happened, document the timeline and consider speaking with an attorney, because separate remedies may exist for retaliation.

What does workers' compensation actually cover?

Workers' comp in California generally covers reasonable medical treatment for the work injury, partial wage replacement while you cannot work, compensation for lasting impairment, and job retraining benefits in some cases. It does not cover everything a negligence claim can, such as pain and suffering. That gap is why third-party claims matter when someone besides your employer was at fault.

What if my injury developed gradually instead of in one accident?

Gradual injuries, like repetitive strain, hearing loss, or conditions from chemical exposure, can be covered by workers' compensation in California. Reporting deadlines often run from when you knew or should have known the condition was work-related. These claims are frequently disputed, so medical evidence connecting the condition to your job duties is important.

When would I have a case outside of workers' comp?

Common examples include being hit by a negligent driver while working, being hurt by defective machinery, or being injured by a hazard at a client's property. In those cases, you may pursue a third-party injury claim in addition to workers' comp benefits. An attorney can review who was involved and whether such a claim exists.

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