“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
No. Workers' comp benefits in California are completely tax-free under federal and state law, with one narrow exception tied to Social Security disability.
Getting hurt at work is stressful enough without worrying about a surprise tax bill. The good news is that the IRS and the California Franchise Tax Board will not touch your workers' compensation benefits. The law protects every dollar from the start.
This is true for weekly temporary disability checks, permanent disability awards, and lump-sum settlements. None of it goes on your tax return. No W-2 arrives in January. No 1099 shows up in the mail. You receive the money and spend it on your recovery. The taxing authorities never enter the picture.
One situation adds complexity: if you are also receiving Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) at the same time, a portion of your SSDI payment can become taxable because of the federal offset calculation. Your workers' comp itself stays completely tax-free, but the SSDI side of the equation shifts. We will walk through that clearly below.
Congress built the exemption directly into the tax code. Internal Revenue Code Section 104(a)(1) removes workers' comp from gross income before any tax is calculated.
The exclusion has been part of federal law for decades. Internal Revenue Code Section 104(a)(1) states that gross income does not include amounts received under a workers' compensation act as compensation for personal injury or sickness. That plain language covers your weekly checks, your disability rating award, and any final settlement.
California's income tax code adopts the same exclusion. The state does not tax income that federal law already exempts. The same payment that escapes the IRS also escapes Sacramento.
Congress made this choice deliberately. Workers' comp replaces wages lost to injury, but it is not the same as wages. It compensates you for a harm, not for services rendered. Taxing it would undermine the purpose of the system, which is to make injured workers whole when they cannot earn a paycheck.
Because the benefits are not taxable income, the insurance company is not required to file any tax form with the IRS. No W-2 is issued because workers' comp is not wages. No 1099 is issued because it is not miscellaneous or non-employee income. This is not a deduction you claim on your return. It is an automatic legal exclusion that happens before your return is ever prepared.
Weekly disability checks, permanent awards, and settlements are fully tax-free. Only regular wages from light-duty work remain taxable in the usual way.
The table below covers every type of payment an injured California worker is likely to encounter:
| Payment or Benefit | Federal Income Tax | California Income Tax | Key Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temporary disability (TD) weekly payments | No | No | 2026 max $1,764.11/week; min $264.61/week (Labor Code 4656) |
| Permanent disability (PD) weekly payments | No | No | 2026 rate $160 to $290/week based on disability percentage |
| Lump-sum settlement (Compromise and Release) | No | No | Full amount exempt regardless of dollar size |
| Stipulated award (future periodic payments) | No | No | Same exemption as a Compromise and Release |
| Medical treatment and prescriptions | No | No | Covered 100% under Labor Code 4600; no copay required |
| Medical mileage reimbursements | No | No | 2026 rate: 72.5 cents per mile |
| Supplemental Job Displacement voucher (SJDB) | No | No | Up to $6,000 under Labor Code 4658.7 |
| Light-duty or modified-duty wages from employer | Yes | Yes | Regular wages run through payroll and taxed normally |
| SSDI when no workers' comp offset applies | Up to 85% | No | Depends on total household income |
| SSDI amount reduced by workers' comp offset | Possibly | No | See the SSDI offset section below |
The light-duty wages row surprises many workers. If your employer brings you back in a modified role while your claim is still open, those hours are compensated as regular wages. Your employer runs them through payroll with normal federal and California withholding. The workers' comp insurance payment is tax-free; the employer paycheck sitting alongside it is not. Keep those two income streams separate in your records.
One more detail for those working with an attorney: workers' comp attorney fees are approved by the workers' compensation judge and typically run about 15 percent of the award. You owe nothing up front. The fee comes out of the workers' comp benefit, which is already tax-free. Neither the attorney's portion nor your net recovery is taxable income.
Your workers' comp stays tax-free regardless. But the Social Security offset can make a portion of your SSDI payment taxable under IRS rules.
Federal Social Security law limits the combined total of SSDI plus workers' comp to roughly 80 percent of your average pre-injury earnings. If your workers' comp payments push the combined total above that ceiling, Social Security automatically reduces your SSDI check by the excess. That reduction is the offset.
The IRS has a separate rule about the offset amount. Even though Social Security cut your actual check, the IRS treats the full, unreduced SSDI figure as if it were available to you. That phantom figure feeds into the normal SSDI taxability formula. Whether it makes any of your SSDI taxable depends on your total household income and filing status. For most single workers with modest income, the practical impact is small or zero. For a household with a spouse's income also in the picture, it can be more significant.
The key point: your workers' comp payment is never the source of the tax. It stays fully exempt. The only amount at issue is on the SSDI side, and even then, only if your total income crosses the thresholds Congress set. If this applies to you, a tax professional familiar with the offset rules can usually run the numbers in a single appointment.
For most injured workers, nothing changes on the tax return. Workers' comp is omitted because the law removes it from income entirely.
You do not claim a special deduction. You do not check a box explaining workers' comp. The income never enters your gross income calculation, so it is invisible to the return. File based on your actual wages, investment income, and other taxable sources. Workers' comp does not appear anywhere on the form.
Keep your explanation-of-benefit statements and payment records through the year. The IRS sometimes sends automated notices when it sees that a person's wages were lower than usual and wants to verify no income was missed. A brief letter with your benefit records showing you were on workers' comp resolves those inquiries quickly. You do not owe any tax; you just need to explain the income gap.
If your situation includes SSDI, a pension, or investment income alongside workers' comp, get a tax professional involved before you file. Those combinations are straightforward to handle when you know what to look for, but guessing can lead to errors on either side of the ledger.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Yazdchi Law serves injured workers across Greater Los Angeles, the Antelope Valley, and the San Fernando Valley. The firm is headquartered in Palmdale and handles workers' compensation cases from Lancaster in the north to Long Beach in the south.
The firm makes regular WCAB appearances at the district offices in Van Nuys, Los Angeles, Long Beach, Pomona, San Bernardino, Riverside, and Oxnard. Wherever your case is assigned, the firm already appears at that board location regularly.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in workers' compensation law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. Tax questions about workers' comp and SSDI interaction come up frequently for workers in industries common throughout the Antelope Valley and greater LA, including construction, manufacturing, and transportation. These workers often qualify for both programs, and the overlap creates questions that a general-practice attorney may not handle regularly. Eman Yazdchi does.
The consultation is free, and you pay no attorney fees unless the firm recovers compensation for you. Call (661) 273-1780 to get your questions answered today.
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.
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