What Workers' Compensation Actually Covers
Workers' compensation is a state-based statutory scheme that provides income replacement and medical benefits if you're injured at work or as a direct result of your employment. In most states, it's compulsory for employers to carry.
For FIFO workers, workers comp covers injuries that happen on site — a fall underground, a machinery accident, a crushing injury. It pays a percentage of your wages while you can't work and covers medical treatment related to the workplace injury.
It does not cover:
- Illness unrelated to your work environment
- Injuries sustained on your R&R — car accident, sporting injury, fall at home
- Mental health conditions unless directly caused by work
- Any condition that develops off-site
The FIFO Reality
FIFO workers spend roughly half their lives off-site — on their R&R week at home, travelling, exercising, doing things with their families. All of that time is completely outside the workers' compensation umbrella.
A miner who tears their ACL playing footy on their week off, has back surgery that takes 6 months to recover from, or is diagnosed with cancer while on leave — none of these are workers' comp events. Without income protection, there's no income replacement at all.
According to industry data, the majority of income protection claims are for illness rather than injury — and the vast majority of those illnesses have nothing to do with the workplace. Cancer, heart disease, and mental health conditions are the most common IP claimants. Workers comp doesn't touch any of these.
Workers Comp Limitations Even When It Does Apply
Even for on-the-job injuries, workers' compensation has significant limitations for FIFO workers:
- Benefit caps — workers comp weekly benefits are typically capped at a percentage of Average Weekly Earnings, which may be far below a FIFO worker's actual site income
- Time limits — most workers comp schemes have time limits on income replacement benefits, typically 26 weeks to 2 years depending on the state
- Disputes — workers comp claims are frequently disputed by insurers, and the process can be slow and stressful during an already difficult period
- Return to work pressure — workers comp schemes often apply significant pressure to return to work, even in modified duties, which can cut your benefits before you're fully recovered
How Income Protection Complements Workers Comp
Income protection insurance fills the gaps that workers comp leaves:
- Covers you anywhere, anytime — on site, off site, overseas, on leave
- Covers illness as well as injury
- Pays up to 75% of your actual income including allowances (not a capped AWE figure)
- Benefit periods up to age 65 — not just 26 weeks
- No pressure to return to work before you're medically ready
Many FIFO workers who have an IP claim while also having a workers comp claim will receive IP benefits on top of (or offset against) workers comp, depending on the policy wording. Your adviser will explain how the offset provisions work.
The Bottom Line
Workers' compensation is not a substitute for income protection insurance. It's a narrow workplace safety net that covers a fraction of the scenarios where a FIFO worker might be unable to earn. Income protection covers the rest — and for FIFO workers with high incomes and high financial commitments, the rest is where the real risk lives.
Compare Income Protection Options
A Nexa specialist will compare IP policies from multiple Australian insurers and find the right one for your FIFO occupation and income. Free callback, no obligation.
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