“Eman at Yazdchi Law was extremely professional, responsive, and supportive at all times. He and his staff exceeded all of my expectations.”
Andrea Dalessandro
✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231
Most California workers' comp claims take 3 months to 2 years, depending on how serious your injury is and whether any disputes arise.
If your paycheck stopped and the medical bills are piling up, waiting is the last thing you want to do. The workers' comp system moves in phases, and each phase has its own clock. Understanding those phases will not speed things up, but it will help you know what is normal and what is a warning sign.
A straightforward claim, say a broken wrist with no surgery, can close in 3 to 6 months. A back injury requiring spinal fusion can keep you in the system for 2 years or longer. The single biggest variable is how long your body takes to reach what doctors call maximum medical improvement, the point at which your condition has stabilized and will not improve further with treatment.
Below is a plain-English guide to every phase, the deadlines the insurer must meet, and the factors that most commonly extend a case.
You have 30 days to report your injury. The insurer then has 90 days to accept or deny your claim under California law.
Report your injury to your employer as soon as possible. California law gives you up to 30 days, but do not wait. Your employer must give you a DWC-1 claim form. Fill it out, keep a copy, and return it. That date starts several important legal clocks, including the one-year deadline to formally file your claim.
Once the insurer receives your completed claim, it has 90 days to formally accept or deny it (Labor Code 5402). If it does not act within 90 days, the law presumes your claim is compensable. That is a powerful protection. Even during the investigation period, the insurer must authorize up to $10,000 in medical treatment so your care does not stop while they deliberate (Labor Code 5402(c)).
If your injury forces you off work, your first temporary disability check must arrive within 14 days of your employer learning you are injured and have lost wages (Labor Code 4650). A late payment triggers an automatic 10% penalty added to what is owed.
| Action | Deadline | Consequence If Missed |
|---|---|---|
| Report injury to employer | Within 30 days | Claim may be denied |
| File DWC-1 claim form | Within 1 year of injury | Permanent bar to all benefits |
| Insurer must accept or deny | Within 90 days | Claim presumed compensable |
| First TD payment issued | Within 14 days of notice | Automatic 10% late penalty |
| Interim medical care authorized | Upon claim filing | Up to $10,000 required by law |
Treatment continues until your doctor declares you permanent and stationary, which can take 2 months to over 2 years depending on injury severity.
All medical care is covered at 100% with no copay. In most cases, your employer's Medical Provider Network controls which doctors you see. If you pre-designated your personal physician in writing before the injury occurred, you can treat with that doctor instead.
The state's Medical Treatment Utilization Schedule governs what treatment is approved. If the insurer denies or modifies a recommended procedure through Utilization Review, you can appeal that decision through Independent Medical Review within 30 days. IMR decisions are binding on both sides and apply the MTUS guidelines.
Surgery is the primary factor that stretches the treatment phase. A shoulder repair typically adds 6 to 12 months of recovery. A spinal fusion can add 18 to 24 months. Treatment authorization delays and insurer backlogs also add weeks or months that are entirely out of your control.
| Injury Type | Typical Time to Permanent and Stationary |
|---|---|
| Minor soft tissue (sprain, strain) | 2 to 4 months |
| Moderate orthopedic (knee, shoulder) | 6 to 12 months |
| Surgery without spinal fusion | 9 to 18 months |
| Spinal surgery or fusion | 18 to 36 months |
| Cumulative trauma or occupational disease | 6 to 24 months |
Temporary disability pays two-thirds of your average weekly wage while you cannot work and can last up to 104 weeks within a five-year period.
In 2026, TD ranges from $264.61 to $1,764.11 per week. Payments continue as long as your doctor certifies you are temporarily totally disabled and you have not hit the 104-week ceiling (Labor Code 4656). For most moderate injuries, TD covers the full active treatment phase and stops when you return to work or reach permanent and stationary status.
If your employer offers you a light-duty or modified position within your medical restrictions and you refuse it without a valid reason, TD payments can be reduced or terminated. If no modified work is available and you remain off work, TD continues. Workers' comp benefits are not taxable income at the federal or state level.
| Temporary Disability Detail | 2026 Amount or Limit |
|---|---|
| Minimum weekly benefit | $264.61 |
| Maximum weekly benefit | $1,764.11 |
| Wage replacement rate | Two-thirds of average weekly wage |
| Maximum total duration | 104 weeks within 5 years |
| Late payment penalty | Automatic 10% added to late payment |
After reaching permanent and stationary status, a medical evaluator rates your disability. Then the parties negotiate a settlement or go to a hearing.
When the permanent disability level is disputed, both sides arrange a medical-legal evaluation. Represented injured workers and the insurer may agree on an Agreed Medical Evaluator to examine the injury and write a report. If they cannot agree, each side chooses from a state-issued panel of three physicians and strikes one name; the remaining doctor becomes the panel Qualified Medical Evaluator (Labor Code 4062.2). QME scheduling in Southern California currently runs 30 to 90 days. Written reports take another 30 to 60 days after the exam.
Your permanent disability rating determines a weekly PD payment (two-thirds of wages, $160 to $290 per week in 2026) and the total number of weeks you collect it. A rating of 70% or higher adds a lifetime life pension. If your employer cannot offer you suitable regular work, your PD award increases by 15%. If suitable work is offered and you can take it, the award decreases by 15% (Labor Code 4658(d)).
Settlement takes one of two forms. A Compromise and Release closes out the entire claim, including future medical care, for a lump sum. Stipulations with Request for Award keeps future medical care open while paying the PD benefit over time. Both require approval from a workers' comp judge, which typically takes 2 to 6 weeks. If you cannot return to your prior job, you may also qualify for a $6,000 Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit voucher for retraining or education costs.
| Case Phase | Typical Duration |
|---|---|
| Injury report and DWC-1 filing | Days 1 to 14 |
| Insurer investigation period | Up to 90 days |
| Active treatment: minor injury | 2 to 6 months |
| Active treatment: surgery required | 12 to 36 months |
| P&S declaration and QME or AME evaluation | 2 to 5 months |
| PD rating and settlement negotiation | 1 to 3 months |
| Judge approval of settlement | 2 to 6 weeks |
| Total timeline: no surgery, no dispute | 3 to 8 months |
| Total timeline: surgery or major dispute | 18 to 36 months |
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Keep reading to understand your California workers' comp benefits, your medical rights, and your next step after an injury.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
Get your case evaluated in 60 seconds.
Get Your Free Case EvaluationThree fields. No obligation.
Read more testimonials →“Eman at Yazdchi Law was extremely professional, responsive, and supportive at all times. He and his staff exceeded all of my expectations.”