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Texas Non-Subscriber Employers: Why They Change Everything After a Work Injury

Texas Non-subscriber Work Injury Lawsuits: What to Know | Undefeated Texas Work Injury Lawyers

Undefeated Texas Work Injury Lawyers

Can I sue my employer in Texas for a work injury? It’s one of the most common questions we hear after a serious workplace accident. And the answer depends on whether your employer carries Workers’ Compensation coverage — or whether they chose to opt out of the system entirely as a non-subscriber.

In our experience, companies that don’t carry Workers’ Comp will still do everything in their power to keep injured workers from filing a lawsuit and recovering the compensation needed to rebuild their lives — even though these employers knowingly gave up important legal protections under Texas law when they opted out. Many workers trust that their employer will “make things right,” only to find themselves buried in medical bills, facing broken promises, and discovering it may be too late to take action that protects their future.

You can’t leave your recovery in the company’s hands.

With Billions won and having successfully represented thousands of industrial workers in some of the worst oilfield blowouts, plant and refinery explosions, truck crashes, and workplace accidents in history, our undefeated work injury lawyers know exactly what it takes to stand up to negligent employers and hold them fully accountable. We don’t just win against the largest petrochemical, oil and gas, and transportation corporations in the world. We set records.

Read on to learn how Texas’ unique workplace injury laws may affect your rights after a work accident and how our legal team can help.

Texas Is the Only State That Allows Employers to Opt Out of Workers’ Compensation Coverage

Unlike every other state in the country, Texas allows private employers to opt out of the Workers’ Compensation system entirely. Companies that choose not to participate are known as non-subscriber employers.

Today, nearly one-third of Texas’ private employers operate outside the Workers’ Compensation system, including some of the largest corporations doing business in the Lone Star State — Amazon among them. 

Instead, many companies offer their own private workplace injury plans and tout the benefits. But these plans aren’t regulated in the same way as Workers’ Comp and they often place even stricter limits on the benefits you can receive after an on-the-job injury.

Before you are pressured into relying on the company plan, know this: Non-subscriber employers lose crucial legal protections under Texas law, even if they carry private insurance plans. If unsafe working conditions caused your injuries, you may very well have the right to pursue full compensation through a personal injury lawsuit against the employer. But you must act quickly.

Companies move fast after an accident to limit their exposure. Speaking with an experienced attorney as soon as possible can help ensure your rights are protected.

Contact our undefeated Texas work injury lawyers today: 1-888-603-3636.

Texas Non-Subscriber Employers: What Injured Workers Need to Know

Understanding whether your employer is a Texas non-subscriber can make a major difference in whether you secure the justice and maximum compensation you deserve — or walk away with far less.

Here’s what every Texas worker should know.

What Is a Non-Subscriber Employer?

A non-subscriber employer is a company that chooses not to carry Workers’ Compensation insurance for its employees under Texas law. Instead of participating in the state system, these employers assume direct responsibility for handling workplace injury claims themselves.

Because these companies operate outside the Workers’ Compensation system, workplace injuries are often handled very differently than in states where workers’ compensation coverage is mandatory.

How Can I Tell if My Employer Is a Non-Subscriber?

Texas employers are required to notify workers about whether they carry Workers’ Comp upon hiring, through workplace postings, and when coverage status changes. These employers must also file  DWC Form-005, Employers’ Notice of No Coverage or Termination of Coverage with the Texas Department of Insurance each year.

But in many cases, injured workers are unsure whether their employer carries Workers’ Comp coverage until after an accident occurs.

Workers can check their employer’s coverage status through the Texas Department of Insurance (TDI) website: Workers’ Compensation Coverage Verification.

If your employer does not appear in the Workers’ Compensation Coverage database, they may be operating as a non-subscriber. If so, you may find the company listed on TDI’s monthly report of those opting out of coverage.

Why Do Employers Opt Out of Workers’ Comp?

Many Texas companies opt out of Workers’ Comp to reduce and control costs, cut corners, and avoid responsibility after an accident.

By becoming non-subscribers, employers may attempt to:

  • Reduce the cost of workers’ compensation insurance
  • Control how workplace injury claims are handled
  • Limit the benefits paid to injured workers
  • Limit the duration of medical treatment
  • Create their own internal injury benefit programs

But cost-cutting decisions can ultimately expose companies to far greater financial consequences. With the help of an experienced trial lawyer, injured workers can pursue the full damages allowed under Texas law — holding negligent employers accountable in ways many companies never anticipated when they chose to opt out.

Under Texas Labor Code Section 406.033, employers who don’t carry Workers’ Comp coverage lose several important legal defenses after a work injury on their watch.

In a non-subscriber work injury lawsuit, the employer generally cannot argue that:

  • The worker assumed the risks of the job
  • A coworker caused the accident instead of the company
  • The worker waived their legal rights through a pre-injury agreement

These restrictions can significantly strengthen your ability to recover compensation. However, injured workers must still prove that the employer’s negligence contributed to the accident. This often involves showing that unsafe practices or conditions—such as understaffing, defective equipment, excessive work hours, inadequate training, or negligent hiring and supervision—played a role in causing the injury.

That’s why it’s critical to hire a legal team with deep experience in federal and state workplace safety regulations, a proven record of uncovering concealed violations, and the resources to investigate exactly what happened — and how the company’s failures allowed it to occur.

What Does That Mean For My Recovery? 

For injured workers, the non-subscriber system creates opportunities that do not exist in most states.

Instead of being limited to the restricted benefits available through Workers’ Comp, injured workers may be able to pursue a workplace injury lawsuit seeking full damages, including all past and future:

  • Medical expenses
  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity
  • Pain and suffering
  • Disability and impairment damages
  • Long-term care needs

Because these cases often involve large employers and complex workplace safety issues, having an experienced work injury trial team is critical to securing maximum compensation.

At Zehl & Associates, our work injury lawyers have built a national reputation for securing record-setting results for injured workers and their families. We take a different approach than most law firms — taking the time to understand what your life looked like before the accident and what was truly taken from you. From there, we carefully quantify those losses and present the full impact of your injuries and losses to a jury to ensure you recover the full compensation you deserve.

What If My Employer Carries a Private Insurance Plan?

Many non-subscriber employers create private occupational injury benefit plans that seem far more generous than Workers’ Comp coverage at first glance, but rarely are.

For example, they often:

  • Restrict which doctors injured workers are allowed to see
  • Require injuries to be reported within very short timeframes
  • Limit wage replacement or medical benefits
  • Attempt to restrict an injured worker’s legal options

These strict conditions make it difficult for injured workers to receive the full compensation they need to provide for their families, let alone just scrape by — all the while pressuring them back to work before they’re ready. 

Depending on the type of private injury benefit plan your employer offers, you may still have the right to pursue a personal injury lawsuit if unsafe working conditions contributed to your injury.

Contact us at (888) 603-3636 to determine your options.

Why Speaking With a Work Injury Lawyer Matters

Determining whether your employer is a non-subscriber — and whether negligence played a role in your injury — can dramatically affect the compensation available to you and your family.

An experienced work injury lawyer can investigate the accident, identify safety failures, and determine whether a non-subscriber workplace injury lawsuit may be possible.

At Zehl & Associates, our top priority is making sure injured workers have the information they need to make the best decision for themselves and their families. Workplace injury cases are complex, and understanding your legal rights is critical. That’s why we offer free consultations, allowing you to speak directly with an experienced work injury lawyer, ask questions, and fully understand your options before deciding how to move forward.

From day one, our team also goes above and beyond to support our clients throughout the recovery process. In addition to fighting for maximum compensation, we help connect clients with leading medical specialists, ensure reasonable medical expenses are covered while your case is pending, and stand by you every step of the way.

The Difference Between a Non-Subscriber Lawsuit & Workers’ Compensation Claim

Workers’ Compensation vs Non-Subscriber Lawsuit
Workers’ Compensation
Non-Subscriber Lawsuit
Limited benefits
Company-approved doctors
No pain & suffering
Cannot sue employer
No public accountability
Full damages available
You choose your own doctors
Pain & suffering allowed
Employer can be sued for negligence
Safety failures exposed in court

Workers’ Compensation systems were designed to provide limited benefits quickly — not to fully compensate injured workers for everything they have lost. Injured workers are often required to treat with company-approved doctors and receive only limited medical benefits and partial wage replacement—never full compensation for pain and suffering, long-term disability, or the real losses caused by a serious workplace injury.

A non-subscriber workplace injury lawsuit is very different — and the best chance of making a full physical and financial recovery:

  • You choose your own doctors for treatment
  • You recover ALL of your damages including past and future medical expenses, lost wages, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, mental anguish, physical impairment, and disfigurement
  • You pursue punitive damages if an employer’s conduct was especially reckless or dangerous

A workplace injury lawsuit can also provide something Workers’ Compensation never will: public accountability. When companies are forced to answer for their safety failures in court, it exposes dangerous practices and pressures employers to improve workplace safety. so that other workers are never injured the same way again.

Common Non-Subscriber Workplace Accidents

Texas is home to some of the most dangerous industries in the nation. Every day, tens of thousands of workers contend with heavy machinery, hazardous materials, and physically demanding jobs in the energy, petrochemical manufacturing, and construction sectors. Even under the best of circumstances, the potential for catastrophic accidents and explosions is always high, increasing the likelihood of injury and death.

But, in our experience, workplace accidents are almost always entirely preventable. They most often result from a company’s routine failure to follow basic safety rules, properly train workers, or maintain safe equipment and job sites. 

The most common accidents that lead to non-subscriber work injury lawsuits in Texas include:

  • Oilfield Accidents: When workers suffer serious injuries in rig explosions and blowouts, equipment failures, and oilfield truck accidents, these catastrophic incidents are often caused by unsafe working conditions, defective machinery, or poor safety oversight.
  • Construction Accidents: Construction workers frequently suffer injuries from falls from heights, collapsing scaffolding, heavy equipment incidents, falling objects, and other workplace hazards. These accidents often occur when companies fail to provide proper fall protection, training, or site supervision.
  • Plant and Refinery Accidents: Workers at chemical plants, refineries, and manufacturing facilities face risks from fires, explosions, toxic chemical exposure, and machinery malfunctions. Many of these incidents occur because companies ignore known safety hazards or fail to properly maintain equipment.
  • Warehouse and Forklift Accidents: Warehouses are fast-paced environments where workers may be injured in forklift crashes, falling inventory, conveyor belt accidents, or loading dock incidents. These accidents are often linked to inadequate training or unsafe operational procedures.
  • Truck & 18-Wheeler Accidents: Many workers are injured while driving or riding in company trucks, vans, or commercial vehicles. Fatigue, poor vehicle maintenance, and unsafe driving policies can all contribute to serious crashes.
  • Maritime & Offshore AccidentsWorkers on offshore rigs, vessels, barges, and platforms can suffer serious injuries in explosions, fires, equipment failures, falling object incidents, or vessel collisions. At the Port of Houston, longshoreman and harbor workers are also at risk while loading and unloading cargo, operating cranes and heavy equipment, or working around moving vessels and shipping containers. Many of these accidents occur because of unsafe equipment, poor maintenance, inadequate training, or dangerous work practices.
  • Heavy Equipment & Machinery Accidents: Defective or poorly maintained equipment can cause crush injuries, amputations, burns, and other severe trauma. Employers have a duty to maintain machinery and ensure workers are properly trained before operating dangerous equipment.

What To Do After a Non-Subscriber Work Injury in Texas

  • Seek medical attention as soon as possible even if you think your injuries are minor. Companies routinely cite an employee’s failure to obtain timely medical care when disputing the severity of injuries and denying valid claims. 
  • Take photos and preserve evidence. If possible, take photos of the accident scene, even if it’s been cleaned up and preserve the clothes you were wearing when you were injured. 
  • Keep records of medical treatment and track all communication related to the injury. This will serve as powerful evidence of your injuries, your prognosis, and treatement.
  • Report the incident to your employer right away. Timely notification documents the work-related nature of your injuries, the timing of the accident, and demonstrates that you took your injuries seriously. 
  • Make a written account of the accident for your records. Include everything you remember about the accident, including details you don’t consider important, and the names and phone numbers of any witnesses.   
  • Contact an attorney.  DO NOT give a formal statement, sign ANY paperwork, or accept any money from the company (other than your regular paycheck) before speaking with an experienced work accident lawyer. 

Undefeated Texas Work Injury Lawyers: (888) 603-3636 for a Free Consult

Having won Billions and recovered the largest verdicts and settlements in history for injured workers and their families, our Houston Work Injury Lawyers have the resources and experience to stand up against the largest companies in the world and ensure that injured workers receive the best medical care and maximum compensation possible for their injuries and losses.

If you or a loved one were seriously injured, burned, or tragically killed in a non-subscriber workplace accident in Texas, contact our Undefeated Non-subscriber Work Injury Lawyers at (888) 603-3636 or send us a confidential email via our Contact Us page.

We’ll answer your questions, explain your rights, and provide you with all the information you need to make the best decision for you and your family.

All consultations are free, and you won’t pay us a dime unless we win your case.

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