Construction Workers Comp in Georgia 2026: What Contractors Need to Know

By Winfield Lee | Lee, Hill & Lee Insurance | March 28, 2026

If you run a construction company in Georgia, workers compensation is probably your single largest insurance expense. And in 2026, the landscape is shifting. New NCCI rate filings, evolving carrier appetites, and changes in how MOD rates are calculated mean that what you paid last year may not reflect what the market will offer you this year. Here is what Georgia contractors need to know heading into the second half of 2026.

How Georgia Construction Workers Comp Rates Work

Georgia uses the NCCI (National Council on Compensation Insurance) system for workers comp rating. Every construction trade has a class code, and each class code carries a base rate per $100 of payroll. Your actual premium is calculated by multiplying that base rate by your payroll and then applying your Experience Modification Rate (MOD).

The formula looks like this: Premium = (Payroll / 100) x Class Code Rate x MOD Rate

For construction, the class codes and rates vary dramatically by trade. Here are some of the most common ones Georgia contractors encounter:

Class Code Description Approximate Rate Range (per $100)
5213Concrete Construction$8.00 - $14.00
5403Carpentry - Commercial$7.00 - $12.00
5551Roofing - All Kinds$18.00 - $30.00
5190Electrical Wiring$4.50 - $8.00
5183Plumbing/HVAC$5.00 - $9.00
5022Masonry$8.00 - $13.00
5606Contractor - Project Mgr/GC$3.00 - $6.00
7219Trucking - Construction Materials$9.00 - $15.00
5474Painting - Commercial$7.00 - $11.00
6217Excavation/Grading$6.00 - $10.00
Key Point: Roofing contractors pay the highest rates in construction, often 3-5x what electrical or plumbing contractors pay. If you are a roofing contractor with a clean loss history, specialty markets may offer significantly better pricing than the standard market.

What Is Changing in 2026

Several trends are reshaping the construction workers comp market in Georgia this year:

1. Specialty Carriers Are Getting More Aggressive

After several years of tightening, specialty construction WC carriers are actively looking for new accounts. Companies like Builders Mutual, EMPLOYERS, Zenith, and several Lloyd's syndicates are writing Georgia construction more aggressively than they have in the past three years. For contractors with clean histories, this means more competition for your account and potentially lower premiums.

2. MOD Rate Calculation Changes

NCCI continues to refine how experience modification rates are calculated. The split point between primary and excess losses has been increasing, which means that a single large claim has less impact on your MOD than it did five years ago. If your MOD spiked because of one big claim several years back, it is worth checking whether the current formula would produce a lower number.

3. Return-to-Work Programs Matter More

Carriers are giving more underwriting credit to contractors with formal return-to-work programs. If you have a documented light-duty program, transitional work assignments, and partnerships with occupational health clinics, you may qualify for credits that were not available even two years ago.

4. Payroll Verification Is Getting Stricter

Georgia carriers are auditing payroll classifications more carefully. Misclassification of employees, especially when you have workers performing duties across multiple class codes, is generating larger audit premiums. Make sure your payroll is properly allocated by class code throughout the year, not just at audit time.

High-MOD Contractors: There Are Options

If your MOD rate is above 1.5, you are paying a significant penalty on every dollar of workers comp premium. A contractor with $500,000 in base premium and a 2.0 MOD is paying $1,000,000 — double what a contractor with the same payroll and a 1.0 MOD would pay.

But a high MOD does not mean you are stuck. Here is what experienced agents do for high-MOD construction accounts:

Georgia-Specific Requirements Contractors Must Know

Georgia has several workers comp rules that catch contractors off guard:

How to Get the Best Rate in 2026

Based on what I am seeing across hundreds of Georgia construction accounts, here is the playbook for getting the best workers comp rate this year:

  1. Shop the specialty market. Standard carriers offer standard pricing. Specialty construction programs from carriers like Builders Mutual, ICW Group, EMPLOYERS, and several excess and surplus lines markets price construction risk differently and often more favorably.
  2. Get your MOD verified. Request your NCCI experience rating worksheet and have an agent review it for errors. Incorrect class codes, misattributed claims, and payroll errors on the worksheet are more common than you think.
  3. Document everything. Safety meetings, toolbox talks, OSHA training, drug testing, return-to-work cases. Every documented program gives your agent ammunition to negotiate with underwriters.
  4. Use an independent agent. Captive agents represent one carrier. Independent agents can access dozens or hundreds of carriers and place your account where the appetite and pricing are best for your specific trade and loss history.
  5. Start early. Begin your renewal marketing 90-120 days before expiration. This gives your agent time to submit to multiple carriers, negotiate, and secure the best terms.

Free Construction Workers Comp Market Check

Bettr Coverage has access to 300+ carrier markets, including every major specialty construction program writing in Georgia. We will run a complimentary market comparison for your account — no cost, no obligation.

Get Your Free Quote

Bottom Line

The Georgia construction workers comp market in 2026 is more competitive than it has been in years. Specialty carriers are hungry for well-run construction accounts, MOD rate calculations are evolving in ways that can benefit contractors with improving loss histories, and independent agents with broad market access can find programs that captive brokers simply cannot offer.

Whether your MOD is 0.8 or 2.8, there is likely a better program available if someone takes the time to look. The contractors who shop their programs regularly save the most money — not the ones who wait until renewal day and hope for the best.