The judicial officer whose title — workers' compensation magistrate — denotes a state-administered WC adjudicator handling claim disputes, medical issues, and benefit determinations within the WC framework. Mid-career WC adjudicatory work.
Most days tend to involve conducting WC hearings, reviewing medical and employment evidence, ruling on contested claim matters, and drafting decisions. You'll often handle a calendar of contested matters, work through medical opinion disputes in the afternoon, and engage with state WC procedural and substantive law.
The hardest parts tend to be the case volume and the technical specificity of state WC frameworks. Each state has its own permanent-disability rating system, settlement structures, and procedural rules, and state-specific learning is foundational. State systems vary — Michigan and some other states use the WC magistrate title; others use ALJs or hearings officers; the substantive law on body parts, ratings, and settlements differs substantially.
People who tend to thrive here are patient with procedural detail, comfortable with medical evidence, decisive under volume, and grounded in worker-protection law. If you want adversarial trial complexity or appellate craft, WC adjudication tends to be procedural. If you find satisfaction in being the decisionmaker that injured workers and employers actually appear before, the role can be steady and quietly important.
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 judicial officer whose title — workers' compensation magistrate — denotes a state-administered WC adjudicator handling claim disputes, medical issues, and benefit determinations within the WC framework. Mid-career WC adjudicatory work.
Median pay for a Workers' Compensation Magistrate 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 Reading Comprehension, Critical Thinking, Active Listening, Writing, and Judgment and Decision Making.
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 Magistrate, Claims Adjudicator, and Justice of the Peace.
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