Workplace injuries happen on every kind of Montgomery jobsite — and employers move fast to limit what they pay.
An assembly-line worker at a supplier plant near Hope Hull tears a rotator cuff pulling parts off a line. A warehouse picker along the I-65 logistics corridor is crushed between overloaded pallets. A nurse at a Montgomery-area hospital is injured restraining a patient, or a landscaper working a downtown contract near Dexter Avenue is struck by equipment on the job. Within days, the employer's insurance carrier is calling with recorded-statement requests and a “panel” of preferred doctors — and the decisions you make in that first week shape the rest of your claim.
Alabama workers' comp is its own system — and it doesn't work the way most people think.
Under the Alabama Workers' Compensation Act, benefits are “no fault” but strictly capped: roughly two-thirds of your average weekly wage for lost time, authorized medical treatment, and a permanent-impairment award tied to a statutory schedule for the injured body part. Your employer — not you — generally picks the treating physician from a panel of four. Pain and suffering are not recoverable through comp. When a third party (a contractor, equipment manufacturer, or negligent driver in a work-related crash) caused or contributed to the injury, a separate lawsuit outside the comp system is often the only way to recover the full value of the harm.
Alabama law gives injured workers two hard deadlines — and written notice to your employer is the first trap.
You must give your employer written notice of a work injury within five days (and in no event more than 90 days) or the claim can be denied outright. A formal workers' compensation claim in Montgomery County Circuit Court must be filed within two years of the injury or the last comp payment, and any third-party personal-injury lawsuit must be filed within Alabama's two-year statute of limitations. Miss any of these windows and the strongest case can disappear.
How our Montgomery attorneys build your workers' comp case.
Our team moves immediately to protect your benefits and your future:
- Document the incident and secure witness statements before the employer's version of events becomes the record.
- Confirm that your written notice was properly given and preserve the paper trail that proves it.
- Push back on panel-of-four physician choices that downplay your injury or rush you back to work.
- Subpoena payroll, personnel, and OSHA inspection records to establish your average weekly wage and any unsafe-condition history.
- Identify any third parties — contractors, equipment makers, or other drivers — whose negligence opens the door to damages beyond the comp cap.
- Fight denials, utilization-review cutoffs, and lowball permanent-impairment ratings through hearings in Montgomery County and across the River Region.
We work to secure your authorized medical care, temporary total and permanent partial benefits, vocational retraining where it applies, and full third-party damages for medical bills, lost earning capacity, and pain and suffering. All consultations are free, and you pay nothing until we win.