Workers Comp Experience Rating 101

Published on Aug 07, 2019

No Description

PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Workers Comp Experience Rating 101

What Is Experience Rating?

  • Method for modifying WC premiums
  • Increases or decreases current year's premium based on past loss experience

What It Does

  • Calculates what losses would have been expected for firm of that industry, size & state
  • Compares that to actual losses

What It Does

  • If actual losses were more than expected, employer pays premium surcharge
  • If less than expected, employer gets premium discount

How It Works

  • Calculated by the WC rating bureau in the state (i.e., NYCIRB)
  • Based on payrolls & losses for last 3 years excluding the current year

How It Works

  • Ex: Premium for Sept. 1, 2019 - Sept. 1, 2020 period
  • Payroll & losses for Sept. 1, 2015 - Sept. 1, 2018

Payroll

  • From reports the insurance carrier for that year sent to rating bureau
  • Based on information the carrier obtained from auditing the employer's payroll records

Payroll

  • All employers are assigned to one or more rating classifications
  • The classification determines the premium rate the employer is charged

Premium Rate

  • NYCIRB files "loss costs" with DFS
  • Loss cost = cost losses plus claim handling expense

Premium Rate

  • Every carrier files a "loss cost multiplier" with DFS
  • Reflects carrier expenses and profit

Premium Rate

  • Loss Cost multiplied by Loss Cost Multiplier

Premium

  • Premium rate multiplied by payroll, divided by 100

Example

  • Class code 8391, Automobile Repair Shop - All Operations & Drivers
  • Loss Cost = 3.78
  • LCM for Hartford Casualty Ins. Co. = 1.283
  • Premium rate = 3.78 x 1.283 = 4.85

Example

  • Payroll = $200,000
  • Premium = 4.85 x $200,000/100
  • Premium = $9,700

Experience Rating

  • Applies "expected loss rate" factor to reported payroll divided by 100
  • Result = expected losses
  • ELR is based on classification
  • Ex: ELR for code 8391 is 2.09

Experience Rating

  • Ex: Payroll for code 8391 = $200,000
  • Expected losses = 2.09 x $200,000/100
  • Expected losses = $4,180

Experience Rating

  • Formula weighs small losses more than large ones
  • Small losses are more frequent
  • Formula penalizes more heavily for frequent losses

Experience Rating

  • Additional factors are applied to amounts of expected & actual losses to recognize frequency and to stabilize

Timothy Dodge

Haiku Deck Pro User