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In Nevada, injured workers must report a workplace injury to their employer within 7 days under NRS 616C.015, and file a claim form (C-4) within 90 days. Workers' comp benefits include medical treatment, temporary total disability (TTD) wage replacement at 66⅔% of average monthly wage, permanent partial disability (PPD) payments, and vocational rehabilitation. Employers cannot fire you for filing a workers' comp claim under NRS 616C.997. If your claim is denied, you have 70 days to appeal under NRS 616C.305. Las Vegas workers should consult a Nevada workers' comp attorney before accepting a settlement or appealing a denial.
Why Nevada Workers' Compensation Is a YMYL Matter
A workplace injury can upend your entire financial life. Medical bills, lost wages, and permanent disability can put enormous pressure on you and your family — and the workers' compensation system, while designed to help injured workers, has strict procedural deadlines that can permanently bar your claim if missed. The insurance companies that administer Nevada workers' comp claims are sophisticated, well-resourced, and motivated to minimize payments. Understanding your rights under Nevada law is essential to getting the benefits you are entitled to.
This guide applies YMYL editorial standards: every legal claim is cited to a specific Nevada Revised Statute. This is general information only — not legal advice. If you have been injured at work in Las Vegas or anywhere in Clark County, consulting a licensed Nevada workers' compensation attorney before you take any significant steps in your claim is one of the most important things you can do.
Reporting a Workplace Injury — NRS 616C.015
Speed matters enormously in Nevada workers' compensation. Under NRS 616C.015, you must report a workplace injury to your employer within 7 days of the accident or the date you knew or should have known the injury was work-related. Missing the 7-day reporting deadline does not automatically bar your claim, but it can create serious problems — including a presumption against your claim and potential reduction of benefits.
In practice: report your injury to your supervisor or HR department as soon as possible after the injury occurs — ideally the same day. Do not wait to see if the injury "gets better." Document the reporting in writing (email or written incident report form) so there is a paper trail of when and how you reported.
NRS 616C.015 — Injury Reporting Deadline
An employee who sustains an injury arising out of and in the course of employment shall give written notice of the injury to the employer within 7 days after the employee knew or should have known that the employee sustained an injury arising out of and in the course of employment. Failure to provide timely notice does not bar a claim if the employer had actual knowledge of the injury or the failure was not prejudicial to the employer or insurer.
Filing the Workers' Comp Claim — C-4 Form
After reporting your injury to your employer, you must obtain and file a workers' compensation claim form. In Nevada, the primary claim form is the C-4 (Employee's Claim for Compensation/Report of Initial Treatment), which is typically completed by the treating physician at your first medical visit. You must seek medical treatment from a physician authorized by your employer's workers' compensation insurer unless it is an emergency.
The deadline for filing the claim form is 90 days from the date of injury. Missing the 90-day deadline will typically bar your claim entirely under NRS 616C.025. Do not delay seeking medical treatment or filing your claim even if you feel the injury is minor — some injuries worsen over time, and you need the claim on record.
Workers' Compensation Benefits in Nevada
Nevada workers' comp provides several categories of benefits for injured workers, governed by NRS Chapter 616C:
| Benefit Type | Description | Amount / Authority |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Treatment | All reasonable and necessary medical care for work injury | 100% paid by insurer (NRS 616C.090) |
| Temporary Total Disability (TTD) | Wage replacement while unable to work | 66⅔% of average monthly wage (NRS 616C.475) |
| Temporary Partial Disability (TPD) | Wage replacement for reduced earning capacity while recovering | 66⅔% of wage reduction (NRS 616C.490) |
| Permanent Partial Disability (PPD) | Compensation for lasting impairment after reaching MMI | Based on % impairment rating (NRS 616C.490) |
| Permanent Total Disability (PTD) | For workers unable to return to any gainful employment | 66⅔% of average monthly wage for life (NRS 616C.440) |
| Vocational Rehabilitation | Retraining if you cannot return to your pre-injury job | Available under NRS 616C.555 |
Employer Retaliation Is Illegal — NRS 616C.997
Many injured workers fear losing their job if they file a workers' compensation claim. Nevada law prohibits this. Under NRS 616C.997, it is unlawful for an employer to discharge or otherwise discriminate against an employee solely because the employee:
- Filed a workers' compensation claim or intends to file one.
- Retained or consulted with an attorney regarding a workers' comp matter.
- Testified or intends to testify in a workers' comp proceeding.
- Exercised any right or remedy afforded under Nevada workers' comp law.
If you have been fired, demoted, had your hours cut, or been subjected to harassment after filing a workers' comp claim, you may have a separate retaliation claim against your employer. These claims can be pursued through the Nevada Labor Commissioner's office or through a civil lawsuit in Clark County District Court. Consult a Nevada employment attorney to evaluate your options.
Do Not Accept a Settlement Without Legal Advice
Insurance companies routinely offer workers' compensation settlements — lump-sum payments that close out your claim entirely. These offers are almost always made before the full extent of your injury is known. Accepting a settlement closes your claim permanently — you cannot go back for more benefits if your condition worsens. Before accepting any settlement offer, consult a Nevada workers' compensation attorney. Many workers' comp attorneys work on contingency and only get paid if you recover.
Appealing a Denied Claim — NRS 616C.305
If your Nevada workers' compensation claim is denied, you have the right to appeal — but you must act quickly. Under NRS 616C.305, you have 70 days from receiving the denial notice to file a written appeal request. The Nevada workers' comp appeals process has multiple levels:
- Level 1 — Insurer Review: Written objection to the insurer's denial (70-day deadline).
- Level 2 — Hearing Officer: Administrative hearing before a state Hearing Officer (appeal the insurer's decision within 30 days of the first level resolution).
- Level 3 — Appeals Officer: Appeal to the Nevada Appeals Officer within 30 days of the Hearing Officer decision.
- Level 4 — District Court: Petition to Clark County District Court for judicial review within 30 days of the Appeals Officer decision.
Each level has its own strict deadline — missing any deadline waives your right to that level of appeal. An experienced Nevada workers' comp attorney is strongly recommended, particularly for the Hearing Officer and Appeals Officer levels, as these proceedings follow formal evidentiary rules that are difficult to navigate without legal training.
Frequently Asked Questions — Nevada Workers' Compensation
Under NRS 616C.015, you must report a workplace injury to your employer within 7 days of the accident or the date you knew or should have known the injury was work-related. You must also file the C-4 claim form within 90 days of the injury date. Do not wait to see if the injury improves — report it immediately and document the reporting in writing. Missing the 7-day deadline can create serious problems for your claim even if it does not automatically bar it.
No. Under NRS 616C.997, it is illegal for a Nevada employer to discharge or retaliate against an employee for filing a workers' comp claim, consulting an attorney about a workers' comp matter, or exercising any right under Nevada workers' comp law. Retaliation includes termination, demotion, reduced hours, or any other adverse employment action. If you believe your employer retaliated against you, you may file a complaint with the Nevada Labor Commissioner or pursue a civil lawsuit. Document all adverse actions with dates and witnesses.
If your Nevada workers' comp claim is denied, you have 70 days from receiving the denial notice to file a written appeal under NRS 616C.305. The appeals process moves through multiple levels: insurer review → Hearing Officer → Appeals Officer → District Court. Each level has strict 30-day deadlines for further appeal. Missing any deadline waives your right to that level of review. Workers' comp appeals are procedurally complex — consulting a Nevada workers' comp attorney before the appeal deadline significantly improves your chances of a successful outcome.
Legal disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Nevada workers' compensation law is complex and claim-specific. Laws cited reflect NRS statutes as of April 2026. Nevada Attorney Finder is not a law firm. © 2026 NevadaAttorneyFinder.com.