The hearings officer who conducts workers' compensation hearings — preliminary matters, disputed claims, medical issues — issuing recommendations or decisions at a mid-career stage. Often a step before or alongside ALJs depending on state.
Most days tend to involve conducting WC hearings, reviewing medical and wage records, taking testimony from injured workers and witnesses, and drafting recommendations or decisions. You'll often handle a calendar of contested matters in the morning, work through medical evidence and disputed treatment authorizations in the afternoon, and engage with state WC procedural rules.
The hardest parts tend to be the volume of cases, the medical-evidence complexity, and the state-specific procedural variation. Some states use hearings officers as fact-finders for boards; others as primary decision-makers; some have multi-tier review, and the role's authority varies by state. State systems vary substantially — California, Texas, Florida, and New York all handle WC adjudication with different role definitions and procedural rules.
People who tend to thrive here are patient, comfortable with medical and wage evidence, decisive under volume, and grounded in the worker-protection framing of WC. If you want adversarial trial work, WC adjudication is procedural. If you find satisfaction in being the decisionmaker that determines workers' compensation outcomes, the role can be steady and quietly important to injured workers.
Where this role sits in the broader career landscape — and where it can take you.
Roles like this one sit within a broader occupational category. The numbers below reflect that full landscape — helpful for context, but your specific experience will depend on level, specialty, and where you work.
The hearings officer who conducts workers' compensation hearings — preliminary matters, disputed claims, medical issues — issuing recommendations or decisions at a mid-career stage. Often a step before or alongside ALJs depending on state.
Median pay for a Workers' Compensation Hearings Officer is about $115K nationally, with the field ranging roughly from $57K to $204K depending on experience, employer, and metro (BLS).
Core skills for this role include Active Listening, Reading Comprehension, Critical Thinking, Judgment and Decision Making, and Writing.
Most people in this role hold a professional degree.
Employment in this field is projected to decline about 0.7% through 2034, with roughly 16,230 people working in it today (BLS).
Closely related roles include Junior Workers' Compensation Hearings Officer, Claims Adjudicator, and Justice of the Peace.
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