Workplace injuries are extremely common in New York, especially in industries like construction, transportation, hospitality, and healthcare. One of the most frequent questions we hear at Vlahadamis Law is:
“Can I sue my employer for my workplace injury?”
The short answer is usually no — because in New York, most workplace injuries fall under the Workers’ Compensation system, which protects employers from being sued while providing medical coverage and lost wages to injured workers.
But there are important exceptions.
Victims with certain types of injuries can bring additional claims — sometimes against third parties, and in extremely severe cases, even against employers under narrow statutory exceptions.
Below is a complete guide to what New York law allows.
New York’s Workers’ Compensation Law creates a “no-fault” system designed to:
In exchange, workers cannot sue their employer, even if the employer’s negligence caused the accident.
Workers’ compensation covers injuries such as:
Learn more about Workplace & Construction Accident Claims in NY.
While workers’ compensation blocks lawsuits against employers in most cases, there are several important scenarios where injured workers may still recover additional compensation.
These exceptions can dramatically increase financial recovery, because they allow compensation for pain and suffering, full lost wages, and long-term damages, which workers’ comp does not cover.
Under New York Workers’ Compensation Law §11, an employer may be sued for indemnification or contribution only if the worker suffered a “grave injury.”
Grave injuries include:
This exception usually comes into play when:
Workers still cannot directly sue their employer — but the employer can be brought into the lawsuit indirectly.
Many workplace injuries involve someone other than the employer who was negligent.
These third-party defendants may include:
These cases often overlap with:
A third-party lawsuit can provide significantly more compensation than workers’ comp alone.
3. You May Sue for Defective Machinery or Equipment
If a tool, ladder, lift, vehicle, or machine was unsafe or defectively designed, you may have a product liability claim against:
Workers’ comp does not block these lawsuits.
Construction workers have special protections under:
These laws allow injured workers to sue property owners, contractors, and certain other parties even when workers’ comp applies.
Extremely rare, but if an employer intentionally harms an employee — not just through negligence — civil lawsuits may be permitted.
Examples would include deliberate assault or knowingly exposing a worker to certain criminal acts.
Workers’ compensation only provides:
It does not provide:
This is why third-party claims or Labor Law claims can be life-changing for injured workers.
Your steps after an accident can significantly impact your legal rights:
Want to learn more? Read our insight into Why Personal Injury Cases Take Time — Common Delays Explained.
Our firm represents injured workers across NYC, Nassau County, Suffolk County, and the Hamptons, handling:
We work to identify every possible avenue of compensation, not just workers’ comp benefits.
Learn more about Vlahadamis Law PLLC.