Last updated: July 7, 2026 · Data reviewed quarterly

Short answer: firing you BECAUSE you filed workers’ comp is illegal in all 50 states. Longer answer: most employment is at-will, so employers can still terminate for unrelated, documented reasons while your claim runs. The whole game is evidence — here is how to protect yourself.

Your protections when fired while on workers comp

What retaliation looks like

Termination days after filing. Sudden negative reviews after years of good ones. Hours cut, impossible shifts, demotion “for restructuring,” pressure to resign, or threats tied to immigration status (itself unlawful coercion). Any adverse action motivated by your claim counts — not just firing.

Evidence that wins a workers comp retaliation case

Build the file before you need it

Start a private log the day you file: dates, who said what, copies of reviews from BEFORE the claim, texts and emails after, witness names, and how similar coworkers were treated. Retaliation cases are won on timelines — a firing two weeks after a claim, against ten years of clean reviews, tells its own story.

If it happens

1) Request the termination reason in writing. 2) Do not sign a severance release on the spot — releases can waive retaliation claims. 3) File a retaliation complaint with your state board (deadlines run 30-180 days in some states). 4) If safety complaints were involved, OSHA’s whistleblower program has its own 30-day window. 5) Your comp claim continues either way — being fired does not end medical or wage benefits.

Remedies actually on the table

Reinstatement, back pay, and in many states extra damages or penalties against the employer — while your underlying claim keeps its value. See what claims pay and whether a separate lawsuit applies.

Free official help & resources

FAQ

Fired for “performance” right after filing?

Timing plus your prior record is exactly the pattern boards look for. Get the reason in writing and file fast — deadlines are short.

Hours cut to nearly nothing on light duty.

Constructive retaliation is still retaliation — and partial wage-loss benefits should cover much of the gap meanwhile. Document and report.

Does being fired stop my comp checks?

No. Benefits flow from the injury, not the job. If checks stop after a firing, call your board immediately.

☕ This research is reader-supported. No law firm pays us. If this guide saved you time or money, you can buy the research team a coffee — it keeps the data free and updated.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Settlement values vary significantly by case and by state. Consult a licensed attorney in your state before making decisions about your claim.

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