NC · A AM Best

Employers Holdings in North Carolina

Employers Holdings writes workers compensation insurance in North Carolina, with A AM Best rating and a $250 minimum premium. North Carolina carriers operate under NCRB rate filings, with a max weekly benefit of $1,380 and a statute of limitations of 2 years. Verified 2026-05-09.

AM Best A (Stable)
North Carolina writing footprint Writes 46 states
Minimum premium $250
North Carolina max weekly benefit $1,380
Statute of limitations 2 years
Audit window Typically within 90 days of policy expiration.

Employers Holdings in North Carolina

WC-only carrier. Cerity is their direct/digital subsidiary. The carrier's industry focus is small business specialist (under 50 employees), and the AM Best rating is A with a Stable outlook. Online quoting is available through the carrier portal. Pay-as-you-go billing is available, which reconciles premium each pay period instead of at the annual audit. Self-service audit is available, employers can upload payroll records through a portal instead of waiting for an auditor visit.

North Carolina workers comp rules that apply to every carrier

North Carolina workers comp benefits are set by statute, not by the carrier. The maximum weekly indemnity benefit is $1,380 at 66.67% of the average weekly wage. The statute of limitations to file a claim is 2 years from the date of injury. Coverage threshold: Employers with 3 or more employees, or 1 or more in construction, or 10 or more in agriculture. On 1099 contractors: Workers are classified based on the 'right to control' test; 1099 status alone does not determine independent contractor status.

How to get a Employers Holdings quote in North Carolina

Have your FEIN, NCCI class code (or job description if you do not know the code yet), estimated annual payroll by class code, three years of loss runs from prior carriers, your published EMR (experience modifier) if you have one, and certificates of insurance for any subcontractors. Employers Holdings can quote faster with complete information; missing payroll detail or loss runs typically delays underwriting by 5 to 10 business days. For accounts under the carrier-set premium ceiling, the online portal can issue a quote in under an hour.

Related

FAQs

Does Employers Holdings write workers comp in North Carolina?

Yes. Employers Holdings writes workers compensation in 46 states, including North Carolina. AM Best rates the carrier A (Stable outlook), and the minimum premium is $250. Online quoting is available.

What kind of North Carolina businesses does Employers Holdings target?

Employers Holdings focuses on small business specialist (under 50 employees). WC-only carrier. Cerity is their direct/digital subsidiary.

What is the max weekly workers comp benefit in North Carolina on a Employers Holdings policy?

Statutory benefits are set by state law, not by the carrier. North Carolina caps weekly indemnity at $1,380 (effective 2025-01-01), calculated as 66.67% of the average weekly wage. Employers Holdings pays the same statutory benefit as any other North Carolina carrier.

How does Employers Holdings handle 1099 contractors in North Carolina?

Workers are classified based on the 'right to control' test; 1099 status alone does not determine independent contractor status. Employers Holdings audits 1099 status against the same standard at policy audit; missing certificates of insurance for subcontractors typically lead to the sub payroll being added to the rated base.

Does Employers Holdings offer pay-as-you-go workers comp in North Carolina?

Yes. Employers Holdings offers pay-as-you-go workers comp, where premium is calculated each pay period based on actual payroll instead of estimated annual payroll. Pay-as-you-go reduces audit surprises and is available in North Carolina through Employers Holdings.

When does Employers Holdings audit my payroll in North Carolina?

North Carolina carriers including Employers Holdings audit Typically within 90 days of policy expiration.. Have payroll segregated by class code, certificates of insurance for every subcontractor, and overtime documented separately.