SC · LLC member

LLC member workers comp in South Carolina

South Carolina does not require LLC members to cover themselves. Single-member LLCs and member-managed LLCs typically elect out, lowering premium but giving up workers comp benefits if a member is injured at work. Verified 2026-05-09.

LLC member self-coverage Optional
Coverage threshold Employers with 4 or more employees are generally required to carry workers' compensation insurance.
Penalty for non-coverage Failure to carry required workers' compensation insurance can result in fines, stop-work orders, and personal liability for employee injuries.
Max weekly benefit $1,134
Statute of limitations 2 years
Audit window Typically within 90-120 days of policy expiration, but can extend for several years.

How LLC member coverage works in South Carolina

An LLC is a hybrid entity, members are owners but the LLC itself is the legal employer for any W-2 hires. South Carolina does not require LLC members to cover themselves. Single-member LLCs and member-managed LLCs typically elect out, lowering premium but giving up workers comp benefits if a member is injured at work. The default treatment depends on whether the LLC is single-member or multi-member, and whether it is member-managed or manager-managed.

Single-member LLC

A single-member LLC is generally treated like a sole proprietorship for tax and workers comp purposes. The member is not an employee of the LLC unless they elect to be. In South Carolina, single-member LLCs typically elect out of self-coverage; if the LLC has W-2 employees, the policy covers them only.

Multi-member LLC

A multi-member LLC is treated as a partnership unless it elects S-corp status. Members are not employees of the LLC, so workers comp historically did not apply to them. South Carolina preserves that default, members are excluded by default and the policy rates only W-2 payroll. Manager-managed LLCs sometimes treat one manager as a covered employee while excluding the rest.

Cost for an LLC in South Carolina

Premium is rated on payroll. If members elect in, the carrier rates each member's draw at a state-minimum payroll figure. The class code that matches the member's actual duties drives the rate per $100. A solo member-elected-in LLC on a clerical code typically pays the carrier minimum (around $250 to $500); a contractor LLC with two members elected in plus three W-2 employees can run from a few thousand to tens of thousands depending on payroll and risk. South Carolina carriers can apply schedule credits up to 25% for low-loss accounts.

Related reading

FAQs

Do LLC members need workers comp in South Carolina?

South Carolina does not require LLC members to cover themselves. Single-member LLCs and member-managed LLCs typically elect out, lowering premium but giving up workers comp benefits if a member is injured at work.

When does an South Carolina LLC have to start carrying workers comp?

Employers with 4 or more employees are generally required to carry workers' compensation insurance. For an LLC with no W-2 employees, the threshold may not trigger; once the LLC hires its first employee, the rule applies.

What if an LLC in South Carolina skips workers comp?

Failure to carry required workers' compensation insurance can result in fines, stop-work orders, and personal liability for employee injuries.

Are LLC member draws rated as payroll in South Carolina?

If a member is included in the policy, the carrier typically rates the member's draw at a minimum payroll set by the state (often around $50,000 annualized for South Carolina, sometimes capped at a maximum). The class code that fits the member's actual job duties drives the rate per $100. If the member elects out by filing an exclusion, draws are not rated and the member has no comp benefit.

Can a single-member LLC in South Carolina skip coverage?

A single-member LLC with no employees typically does not need workers comp at all in South Carolina; the coverage threshold usually requires at least one employee. Once the LLC hires its first employee, the member can still elect out of self-coverage and only insure the W-2 employees.