Workers' Compensation Insurance in Iowa
A workers' compensation insurance policy in Iowa runs an estimated $0 a year. That number is a representative estimate for comparison, not a quote: your actual premium is driven by your payroll, employee job classifications, and claims history, which is why comparing carriers matters.
*Illustrative figure for comparison, not a quote. Top local risk: tornado & hail.
Iowa's dominant exposure is tornado & hail, and that risk is a big reason workers' compensation insurance is priced and underwritten the way it is locally. Insurers weigh tornado & hail history when they set rates and decide what to cover, so it is worth confirming your policy actually responds to it before you buy.
With roughly 3.2M residents, Iowa is a sizeable workers' compensation insurance market, and its tornado & hail exposure is one of the factors insurers weigh when pricing coverage here. Premiums and availability vary widely by carrier, so confirm current requirements with the Iowa Department of Insurance before you rely on them.
Coverage that matters here.
Medical expense
Pays reasonable and necessary medical treatment — emergency care, surgery, rehabilitation — for work-related injuries and illnesses.
Lost wages
Replaces a portion of the employee's income, typically two-thirds of average weekly wages, during the recovery period.
Disability
Provides ongoing wage replacement for permanent partial or total disabilities resulting from a work-related injury.
Employer liability
Covers legal defense and damages if an injured employee sues the employer outside the workers' comp system.
What a policy responds to.
Other insurance in Iowa.
Compare every line for Iowa, or see the full Iowa insurance hub.
Workers' Compensation Insurance in Iowa, answered.
How much is workers' compensation insurance in Iowa?
A representative workers' compensation insurance premium in Iowa runs around $0 per year. This is an estimate for comparison, not a quote — your actual rate depends on the property, coverage limits, and insurer.
Is workers' compensation insurance required for my business?
Most states require workers' compensation as soon as you hire your first employee, though the threshold varies. Some states exempt very small employers or certain industries. Failing to carry required coverage exposes you to fines, penalties, and personal liability for injured workers' costs.
How is workers' compensation insurance priced?
Premiums are calculated per $100 of payroll, multiplied by a rate assigned to each job classification based on its injury risk. Your experience modification factor, which reflects your claims history, raises or lowers that base rate. High-risk industries like construction pay more per $100 than office-based businesses.
Can an employee sue me if they collect workers' comp benefits?
In most cases, accepting workers' compensation is the exclusive remedy for an injured employee — they give up the right to sue the employer in exchange for guaranteed benefits. There are narrow exceptions for intentional acts by the employer or gross negligence in some states.