HI · Competitive state fund

Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC)

Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC) is the competitive state workers compensation fund in Hawaii, operating alongside private carriers. State funds typically serve as the carrier of last resort and also write voluntary policies for any qualifying employer. Verified 2026-05-09.

Market structure Competitive, alongside private carriers
Coverage threshold Employers with one or more employees, whether working full-time or part-time, are directly affected.
Max weekly benefit $1,192
Statute of limitations 2 years
Audit window within 90 days of policy expiration
Non-coverage penalty Penalties for non-compliance include fines of up to $10,000, stop-work orders, and potential criminal charges.

About Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC)

Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC) is the competitive state workers compensation fund in Hawaii, operating alongside private carriers. State funds typically serve as the carrier of last resort and also write voluntary policies for any qualifying employer.

State funds were originally created to ensure every employer can find workers comp coverage, even employers private carriers refuse to write. Hawaii preserved a competitive market, so the state fund competes with private carriers on price and service. Some employers prefer the state fund for stable rates and consistent claims handling; others prefer private carriers for industry specialization or pay-as-you-go billing.

Pricing on a state fund policy in Hawaii

State funds use the same NCCI class code rate filings as private carriers; the rate per $100 of payroll is the same. Differences come in at the schedule rating stage (where the underwriter applies discretionary credits or debits, capped at 25% in Hawaii) and the dividend programs (some state funds return a portion of premium to policyholders in good loss years).

Claims handling

Statutory benefits are set by Hawaii law and apply equally to state fund and private carrier policies. The state fund typically maintains its own in-house claims operation, while private carriers may use third-party administrators (TPAs). Some employers prefer the state fund for the consistency of a single in-state claims team; others prefer private carrier TPAs for specialization in their industry.

Related reading

FAQs

What is Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC)?

Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC) is the competitive state workers compensation fund in Hawaii, operating alongside private carriers. State funds typically serve as the carrier of last resort and also write voluntary policies for any qualifying employer.

Is Hawaii a monopolistic state for workers comp?

No. Hawaii is a competitive market where private carriers and Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC) both write workers comp. The state fund typically serves as a carrier of last resort plus a voluntary writer for any qualifying employer.

Who is eligible to buy from Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC)?

Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC) typically writes any Hawaii employer the private market declines, plus voluntary submissions from employers who prefer the state fund for cost or service reasons. Some state funds have specialty programs for high-risk industries.

Who has to carry workers comp in Hawaii?

Employers with one or more employees, whether working full-time or part-time, are directly affected.

What is the penalty for skipping coverage in Hawaii?

Penalties for non-compliance include fines of up to $10,000, stop-work orders, and potential criminal charges.

What is the max weekly benefit on a Hawaii Employers Mutual Insurance Company (HEMIC) policy?

Statutory benefits are set by Hawaii law and apply equally on private and state-fund policies. The max weekly indemnity benefit is $1,192 (effective 2025-01-01), calculated as 66.67% of the average weekly wage.