In Texas, injured workers have 90 days from the date of claim denial to file a formal appeal with the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp — missing this deadline can permanently bar benefits.
A denied workers compensation claim in Texas is not the end of the process — it is the beginning of the appeals stage. The most important thing to know is your appeal deadline: in Texas, you have 90 days from the date of denial to file a formal appeal with the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp. Missing this deadline can permanently bar your right to benefits, regardless of the merits of your claim.
The five most common reasons workers comp claims are denied in Texas are: (1) late reporting — most states require you to report a workplace injury within 30–90 days of the incident; (2) disputed workplace causation; (3) pre-existing conditions; (4) failure to seek medical treatment promptly; and (5) disputes about whether the employer carried valid workers comp insurance. Each of these grounds can be successfully challenged with the right evidence.
The appeals process in Texas typically involves filing a formal objection with the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp, attending a mediation or informal conference, and if unresolved, proceeding to a formal hearing before a workers comp judge. Approximately 60–70% of denied claims that go to hearing result in benefits being awarded nationally — so filing an appeal is nearly always worth pursuing.
| State | Texas |
|---|---|
| Administering Authority | Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp |
| Appeal Deadline | 90 days from date of denial |
| Benefit Rate if Appeal Succeeds | 70% of AWW |
| Maximum Weekly Benefit | $1,087 |
| PPD System | Impairment Income Benefit (IIBs) |
In Texas, you have 90 days from the date of the denial notice to file a formal appeal with the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp. This deadline is strict — file your appeal immediately upon receiving a denial, even before gathering all supporting evidence.
Common denial reasons in Texas include: late reporting of the injury; disputed causation (insurer argues injury did not occur at work); alleged pre-existing conditions; insufficient medical evidence; and administrative filing errors. Each denial reason has a specific legal rebuttal.
You can represent yourself in a workers comp appeal in Texas, but attorney-represented claimants win at significantly higher rates and receive larger awards. Workers comp attorneys work on contingency — fees of 15%–25% of the award are only collected if you win, and are regulated by the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp.
The single most important step is to file your appeal before the 90-day deadline with the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp. After that: gather all medical records, incident reports, and witness statements; request a copy of the complete claim file from the insurer; and consult a workers comp attorney as soon as possible.
Strong appeal evidence in Texas includes: medical records clearly linking your injury to a workplace event; your physician's written opinion on causation; pay stubs and AWW documentation; incident reports filed with your employer; witness statements; and any surveillance or photographic evidence of the workplace hazard.
Nationally, approximately 60%–70% of denied workers comp claims that proceed to a formal hearing result in benefits being awarded, according to workers comp research. Success rates are highest for claims where the denial was based on disputed causation or pre-existing condition arguments — issues where medical evidence can overcome the insurer's position.
In Texas, you may be able to request expedited or emergency relief through the Texas Department of Insurance, Division of Workers' Comp if your denial has left you without income and unable to afford medical treatment. Additionally, you may qualify for state unemployment benefits or short-term disability insurance while your workers comp appeal is pending — consult an attorney to coordinate these benefits.