Won’t you agree that running a business is hard work? You have to take care of operating costs, like rent, utilities, salaries, and marketing, while watching every dollar.
Yet, among these visible line items is workers’ compensation or workers’ comp. Unlike your sales or shipping costs, workers’ comp premiums are often fixed and rigid. They remain the same even if you have a slow month or a record-breaking quarter.
This is more concerning since premiums for workers’ comp have risen in 2025. California, for instance, implemented an 8.7% average increase after nearly a decade of declining rates. Similarly, in Connecticut, a mix of higher wages and increased legal fees prompted the state to raise rates for specific industries.
To survive these financial pressures, you must stop treating workers’ comp insurance as a static bill and align its structure with your cash flow to protect your liquidity. Here’s how you can do that.
#1 Transition to Pay-As-You-Go
Traditional workers’ compensation billing relies on a system of annual estimation.
In this setup, employers must predict their total yearly payroll before the policy even begins. The insurer then applies a rate based on job classifications. They also require a down payment, which frequently ranges from 25% to the full amount of the estimated annual premium.
This immediate hit to cash flow happens before a single employee even clocks in. For small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), tying up such a large sum upfront can seriously jeopardize daily operations and stall potential growth investments.
Pay-as-you-go (pay-go) eliminates these hurdles by linking premium payments directly to payroll cycles. Rather than paying for an estimated future, you pay for the immediate past. This transition replaces a large, speculative lump sum with smaller, more accurate increments paid weekly, biweekly, or monthly.
One of the benefits of pay-go is that it allows for real-time scaling. If your business experiences seasonality, such as a construction firm during winter, your premiums automatically drop as your payroll decreases. That way, you don’t pay for estimated employees who aren’t currently on the clock.
#2 Consider Retrospective Rating Endorsed Policies
If your business has a strong safety record and a predictable claims history, a retrospective rating plan (retro plan) can help align costs with performance.
Standard guaranteed cost workers’ comp policies have a fixed premium, regardless of performance. But a retro plan allows the final premium to be determined by the actual losses incurred during the policy period.
Just like a standard policy, the insurer checks your actual payroll at the end of the term to set the standard premium. The insurer then looks at the actual claims (losses) paid out during that year. Your final bill is a result of applying pre-agreed retro factors to both the audited premium and the incurred losses.
As workers’ comp claims can take years to resolve, retro policies adjust the premium at set intervals.
Prescient National notes that adjustments typically begin six months after the policy ends, followed by annual reviews for the next three years. These milestones allow the premium to catch up with the actual cost of claims as they develop or settle over time.
So, a retro plan rewards safety with direct savings or refunds, which converts your loss-prevention efforts into immediate liquidity.
#3 Use a Premium Financing Strategy
Even with well-structured coverage, the upfront cost of a workers’ compensation policy can create a real cash flow burden if you’re operating on thin margins.
Premium financing offers a practical solution. Rather than paying the full annual premium (or a large chunk of it) upfront, you work with a third-party finance company that pays the carrier in full. You then repay the finance company in equal monthly installments over 9 or 10 months.
The decision to finance a premium is often driven by the internal rate of return (IRR) of the business.
If you reinvest $50,000 into your operations to earn a 15% return while securing a premium finance loan at 7% interest, it creates an 8% spread. That way, you effectively profit from the difference between your internal growth rate and the cost of the loan.
One of the benefits of a premium financing strategy is asset-backed security. Lenders often offer competitive rates because the collateral is the insurance policy. If the business defaults on the loan, the lender has the legal right to cancel the policy. Also, they can collect the unearned premium refund from the insurance carrier.
Turning a Liability into an Asset
Workers’ compensation shouldn’t be a black box that produces an unpredictable bill once a year. You can ensure that your premium dollars are always working in tandem with your revenue, rather than against it, if you follow these tips.
Talk to your insurance partner today. Tell them you want your insurance to match your cash flow. When your insurance payments move in sync with your revenue, you reduce financial stress and keep your capital where it belongs. That is, working for your business.

