Oregon - National Council on Compensation

Hospital, professional employees workers comp rate in Oregon

The filed workers comp rate for class code 8833 (Hospital, professional employees) in Oregon is $0.400 per $100 of payroll. On $500,000 of payroll, that is roughly $2,000 in base premium.

Rate per $100 $0.400
Rate type loss_cost
Authority National Council on Compensation
Effective 2024-01-01

Workers comp rules in Oregon affecting code 8833

Oregon uses NCCI for workers comp rate setting. Coverage is mandatory once an employer crosses the threshold of All employers with one or more employees are required to carry workers' compensation insurance..

Max weekly benefit $1,884.69
Wage replacement 66.67%
Filing deadline 1 yr
Schedule credit cap 25%

Subcontractor coverage in Oregon

General contractors can be held liable for the workers' compensation coverage of uninsured subcontractors and their employees.

Owner-exclusion rules for code 8833

Oregonallows business owners to file an election excluding themselves from workers comp coverage. Excluding $80,000 of owner payroll at $0.400 saves $320 per year.

1099 contractor handling

Individuals classified as independent contractors are generally not considered employees for workers' compensation purposes if they meet specific statutory criteria.

Penalty for failing to carry coverage

Employers failing to carry required coverage face significant fines, stop-work orders, and potential civil and criminal charges, along with personal liability for injured workers' benefits.

Audit window after policy expiration

After your policy expires, Oregon's rating authority allows within 90-120 days of policy expiration for a premium audit. Code 8833 payroll discovered late can result in additional premium owed. Maintain segregated payroll records for at least the audit window plus one year.

Ways to lower your premium for code 8833 in Oregon

Most employers paying for code 8833 could reduce annual premium by 10-30% by applying one or more of the levers below. Each is grounded in Oregon-specific rules where applicable.

  • Experience modifier (EMR): A 0.85 EMR (well-managed) cuts $0.400 to $0.340 per $100, saving roughly $300 on a $500K payroll. A 1.25 EMR (loss-burdened) inflates it to $0.500. Build a lower EMR by reducing claim frequency (every claim hurts the modifier even if dollar cost is small).
  • Schedule credits: Oregon permits up to 25% schedule credit at underwriter discretion. At $0.400, a 7% credit lowers your effective rate to $0.372 per $100.
  • Deductible plans: Per-claim or aggregate deductibles ($1K-$10K typical) cut premium 5-15%. Best fit when historical claim count is low.
  • Reclassify payroll: Code 8833 may be applied too broadly. If a portion of payroll is genuinely clerical and properly segregated, that portion can be reported as code 8810 (clerical) at $0.10-$0.30 per $100.
  • PEO or staff leasing: A Professional Employer Organization can pool your code-8833 payroll with similar businesses in Oregon, often securing better blended rates than your standalone EMR can achieve.
  • Dividend or retro plans: Some carriers offer participating policies that return a dividend if your loss ratio stays below a target. Best for employers with predictably good loss experience.
  • Wrap-up policy for projects: For larger code-8833 operations (especially construction), an OCIP or CCIP wrap can consolidate coverage at lower aggregate cost.

Common claim drivers in healthcare affecting code 8833

Rate filings for code 8833 reflect what actually drives claim cost for this occupation across NCCI's national experience and Oregon's state-specific loss data. The largest drivers behind the $0.400 rate are typically:

  • Patient-handling injuries. Lifting and transferring patients drives 35-50% of healthcare worker comp claim cost.
  • Sharps and bloodborne exposure. Needlestick injuries trigger long-tail surveillance and treatment claims.
  • Workplace violence. Patient and visitor aggression is rising sharply in ER, behavioral health, and long-term care.

Targeting these in your safety program produces the largest EMR improvement. Most claim-frequency reductions come from controls on the top two drivers above; severity reductions require return-to-work programs and aggressive medical management.

FAQ

What is the workers comp rate for code 8833 in Oregon?

The filed workers comp loss cost or rate for NCCI class code 8833 in Oregon is $0.400 per $100 of payroll.

How much would I pay on $500,000 payroll?

At $0.400 per $100, $500,000 yields a base premium of $2,000 before EMR and schedule credits. With an EMR of 0.85, effective rate is $0.340; with 1.25, it is $0.500.

Where else can I see code 8833?

UT has the cheapest filed rate ($0.170) and NY the highest ($0.995). Oregon sits at the 35th percentile across 20 peer states.

Can I get a schedule credit on code 8833 in Oregon?

Oregon permits up to 25% schedule credit. At $0.400, a 10% credit lowers effective rate to $0.360 per $100.

Can I exclude myself from code 8833 coverage in Oregon?

Yes. Oregon allows business owners to file an election excluding themselves from workers comp coverage on their own payroll.