The Texas Non-Subscriber Difference
Every other state in the US requires most private employers to carry workers compensation insurance. Workers comp provides medical coverage and wage replacement for injured employees — but it also significantly limits what employees can recover and how they can pursue claims.
Texas made a different choice. The state allows private employers to opt out of the workers compensation system entirely. These employers are called non-subscribers. And if your employer is a non-subscriber, the legal landscape changes dramatically in your favor.
What Changes When Your Employer Is A Non-Subscriber
When a Texas employer opts out of workers compensation, they lose three of the most powerful legal defenses available in injury cases:
Defenses Non-Subscribers CANNOT Use
- Comparative fault defense — They cannot argue that your own negligence contributed to the accident
- Assumption of risk defense — They cannot argue you voluntarily accepted the risks of the job
- Fellow servant defense — They cannot argue a coworker's negligence caused your injury
This means that in a non-subscriber case, you essentially only need to prove that the employer's negligence played any role in causing your injury — a significantly lower bar than standard negligence cases. The employer cannot shift blame to you or your coworkers to reduce their liability.
How To Find Out If Your Employer Is A Non-Subscriber
Texas employers are required to notify employees of their workers compensation status. There are several ways to find out:
- Check with your HR department or manager — they are required to disclose this
- Look for a posted notice in your workplace — non-subscribers must post notice of their status
- Search the Texas Department of Insurance Division of Workers Compensation database at tdi.texas.gov
- Ask an independent attorney to investigate — this is often the fastest and most reliable method
What You Can Recover In A Non-Subscriber Case
Because non-subscriber cases are full civil negligence claims rather than workers compensation claims, your potential recovery is significantly broader:
- Full medical expenses — past and future — without the benefit caps that limit workers comp awards
- Full lost wages — 100% of lost income rather than the partial wage replacement workers comp provides
- Future lost earning capacity — if your injuries permanently affect your ability to work
- Pain and suffering — workers comp pays nothing for pain and suffering; non-subscriber cases can recover substantial amounts
- Mental anguish and emotional distress
- Punitive damages if the employer's conduct was grossly negligent
💡 The Non-Subscriber Advantage Is Significant
Studies of Texas workplace injury cases consistently show that non-subscriber cases result in substantially higher recoveries than workers compensation claims — often 3 to 5 times more — because victims can pursue full civil damages including pain and suffering and are not limited by the benefit schedules that cap workers comp awards.
What If My Employer Has Workers Comp?
If your employer carries workers compensation insurance, you are generally required to file a workers comp claim for injuries occurring in the course of employment. However, having workers comp coverage doesn't necessarily end all your options:
Third-party claims: If someone other than your employer caused or contributed to your injury — a contractor on the job site, an equipment manufacturer, a property owner — you can pursue a separate personal injury claim against them regardless of your employer's workers comp status.
Gross negligence: In limited circumstances where an employer's conduct was grossly negligent — consciously disregarding an extreme risk — even workers comp employees may have additional legal options.
An independent attorney can evaluate all potential claims available in your specific situation during a free consultation.
⚠️ Critical Deadline For Workers Comp Claims
If your employer has workers compensation and you need to file a workers comp claim, you must report your injury to your employer within 30 days and file a claim with the Texas Division of Workers Compensation within one year of the injury. Missing these deadlines can permanently bar your workers comp claim. Contact an attorney immediately after any workplace injury.