How Contractors Can Lower Their Workers Comp MOD Rate: A Step-by-Step Reduction Plan

By Winfield Lee | Lee, Hill & Lee Insurance | March 30, 2026

If you run a construction company in Georgia or anywhere in the Southeast, your Experience Modification Rate is probably the single most expensive number you are not actively managing. I have seen contractors paying $200,000 or more in unnecessary premium because their MOD is inflated by fixable errors, open claims that should have been closed years ago, or simply a lack of strategy. This guide walks through exactly how to audit your current MOD, fix what is wrong, and build a reduction plan that starts saving you money within the first year.

Step 1: Get Your NCCI Experience Rating Worksheet

Everything starts here. Your Experience Rating Worksheet is the document NCCI uses to calculate your MOD. It lists every workers comp claim from the last three completed policy years, along with the payroll and class codes used to determine your expected losses.

You can get this document from your current insurance agent, or you can request it directly from NCCI at ncci.com. If your agent cannot produce it within 48 hours, that tells you something about how closely they are managing your account.

What to ask for: Request the full unit statistical report along with the worksheet. The unit stat report shows the raw data your carrier reported to NCCI — this is where reporting errors originate, and it is the document you need to dispute incorrect entries.

Step 2: Audit Every Claim on the Worksheet

Go through each claim line and verify the following:

Real Audit Example: Georgia Grading Contractor

A grading contractor in middle Georgia had a 1.87 MOD. On review, we found two claims totaling $94,000 in reserves that had actually been settled and closed at $31,000 total. The carrier had updated their system but never reported the closures to NCCI. After filing corrections, the MOD dropped to 1.52 — saving the contractor approximately $68,000 per year in premium on a $195,000 base.

Step 3: Close Open Claims Aggressively

Every open claim on your worksheet has a reserve — the carrier's estimate of what they expect to ultimately pay. That reserve is what NCCI uses in the MOD calculation, not the amount actually paid to date. Open reserves are almost always higher than final settlement amounts because carriers reserve conservatively to avoid under-reserving.

Work with your carrier's claims adjuster to close or settle open claims as quickly as possible. Strategies include:

Step 4: Attack Claim Frequency

The NCCI MOD formula weights claim frequency far more heavily than claim severity. This is because NCCI splits each claim into primary losses (the first ~$18,500) and excess losses (everything above that). Primary losses carry full weight in the formula while excess losses are heavily discounted.

What this means in practice: ten $5,000 claims will raise your MOD more than one $200,000 claim. The most effective MOD reduction strategy for contractors is eliminating small, frequent claims — exactly the kind of injuries that happen when safety culture is weak.

Claim Pattern Total Losses Primary Loss Impact MOD Effect
1 claim at $100,000$100,000~$18,500Moderate increase
5 claims at $20,000 each$100,000~$92,500Severe increase
10 claims at $10,000 each$100,000~$100,000Maximum increase

Focus your safety program on the injuries that happen most often on construction sites:

Step 5: Implement a Return-to-Work Program

A formal return-to-work (RTW) program is the single highest-impact initiative for reducing claim costs and MOD impact. When an injured employee returns to modified duty quickly, it reduces indemnity (lost wage) payments, keeps the claim from developing into a permanent disability case, and maintains the worker's connection to the job.

Georgia RTW Best Practice: Georgia law allows you to offer modified duty to injured workers. If the worker refuses suitable modified duty, their temporary total disability (TTD) benefits can be suspended. Work with your claims adjuster and a return-to-work coordinator to document available modified duty positions and communicate them to the treating physician in writing.

Step 6: Use Georgia-Specific Premium Credits

While you work on reducing your MOD over the 3-4 year cycle, take advantage of credits and programs that reduce your premium immediately:

Step 7: Consider Alternative Program Structures

If your MOD is above 1.5 and standard market options are expensive, these program structures can reduce your actual cost while the MOD improves:

Get Your Free MOD Reduction Analysis

Bettr Coverage will pull your NCCI worksheet, audit every claim, identify errors, and build a custom reduction timeline showing your projected MOD over the next 3 years. We will also run a market comparison across 300+ carrier markets to find the best program for your current situation. Free, no obligation.

Request Your Free MOD Analysis

The 12-Month MOD Reduction Timeline

Here is what a realistic MOD reduction plan looks like for a Georgia contractor:

Month Action Expected Impact
Month 1Audit NCCI worksheet, file corrections for errorsImmediate MOD recalculation (30-60 days)
Month 1-2Push carrier to close settleable open claimsMOD drops at next anniversary rating
Month 1-3Implement return-to-work programReduces cost of new claims going forward
Month 1-3Certify drug-free workplace program7.5% premium credit (immediate)
Month 3-6Deploy targeted safety training for top injury typesReduces claim frequency within 6-12 months
Month 6Market to specialty carriers with updated loss runsBetter rates even with current MOD
Month 12Review MOD trajectory and adjust strategyVerify improvements flowing through

The Bottom Line

Your MOD rate is not a verdict — it is a score that can be managed. Most contractors I work with are overpaying by at least 15-20% because of worksheet errors, unmanaged open claims, or simply not knowing that alternative program structures exist. The ones who take control of their MOD save tens of thousands per year and free up capital for equipment, hiring, and bidding on bigger projects.

The process starts with one document — your NCCI Experience Rating Worksheet. Get it, audit it, and start managing the number that is managing your premium.