Vermont Workers' Compensation Calculator
The workers’ compensation system in Vermont is designed as a no-fault trade-off: employees receive guaranteed benefits without proving employer negligence, and in exchange employers are generally protected from personal injury lawsuits. Your own carelessness typically does not reduce your benefits, though intentional misconduct, intoxication, or horseplay may disqualify a claim.
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How Vermont Law Affects Your Workers' Compensation Case
The statute of limitations for this type of claim in Vermont is 6 years — longer than the national average of 1.9 years. While you have more time than most states, delaying still weakens your case as evidence degrades and witnesses become harder to locate.
Vermont pays temporary total disability (TTD) benefits at 67% of your average weekly wage, up to a maximum of $1,498 per week. This maximum is above the national average of $1,243. Vermont does not impose a fixed week limit on TTD benefits, allowing them to continue as long as you remain unable to work.
Vermont relies on the AMA Guides, 5th Edition to assess permanent impairment. Your treating physician or an independent medical examiner assigns a whole-person impairment rating, which is then converted into a disability benefit amount. The specific guide version used in Vermont can produce ratings that differ meaningfully from those in states using different editions.
Vermont allows injured workers to choose their own treating physician for workers' compensation claims. In states without this right, the employer or insurer selects the doctor, which can affect both the quality of care and the impairment rating you receive.
Your first obligation after a workplace injury in Vermont is to notify your employer within 30 days. This is not the same as filing a workers’ compensation claim — it’s a prerequisite. Even if you are unsure whether your injury is serious enough to require workers’ comp benefits, it is safer to report it within the 30-day window. Late notification is a common reason claims are disputed or denied.
Vermont applies a different statute of limitations to occupational diseases than to acute workplace injuries. For conditions like hearing loss from prolonged noise exposure, repetitive stress injuries, respiratory illness from chemical exposure, or occupational cancers, you have 2 years from the date of diagnosis or the date you knew (or should have known) the condition was work-related, compared to 6 years for standard workplace injuries. This distinction matters because occupational diseases often develop gradually over years of exposure.
If your workplace injury prevents you from returning to your prior job in Vermont, you may be entitled to vocational rehabilitation benefits. These benefits are designed to help injured workers re-enter the workforce through skills training, education, job search assistance, and related support. The goal is to help you achieve employment at wages as close as possible to your pre-injury earnings. Your eligibility is typically determined through a vocational assessment.
Key Vermont Laws
How Does Vermont Compare?
Vermont Workers' Compensation FAQs
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Legal Disclaimer
This calculator uses Vermont's statutes as of 2026-03-06. Laws change frequently. This tool provides estimates for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Verify current rules with a Vermont-licensed attorney before making decisions about your case. Learn about our methodology.
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