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Workers’ Compensation

Philadelphia Construction Accident Workers’ Compensation Lawyer

Construction sites are among the most dangerous workplaces in Pennsylvania. When you are hurt on a Philadelphia job site, you have rights under both workers’ compensation law and Pennsylvania personal injury law. Lerner Steinberg & Associates has fought for injured construction workers for over 34 years, with a Philadelphia office at 3415 Race Street in University City.

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34+ Years Experience
Workers’ Comp + Personal Injury
No Fee Unless We Win
Available 24/7

⚠ Time-Sensitive — Pennsylvania Law Limits Your Window to File

Philadelphia construction accident victims have 120 days to report the injury and 3 years to file a claim — and only 2 years to bring a third-party lawsuit.

34+ years representing injured Pennsylvania workers. We pursue workers’ comp and third-party claims together. No fee unless we win.

Workers’ Compensation for Philadelphia Construction Workers

Pennsylvania workers’ compensation covers virtually all construction workers injured on the job, regardless of fault. If you were hurt while working on a Philadelphia construction site — whether from a fall, a tool accident, a structural collapse, or any other cause — your employer’s workers’ compensation insurance is required to cover your medical treatment and replace a portion of your lost wages.

Workers’ comp benefits for injured construction workers in Philadelphia include payment of all reasonable and necessary medical treatment related to the injury, wage loss benefits equal to approximately two-thirds of your average weekly wage, specific loss benefits for permanent impairment of a body part, and death benefits for surviving family members in fatal accidents.

Workers’ comp covers you even if the accident was partially your fault. Do not let your employer or their insurer tell you otherwise. Report your injury and contact us immediately.

Construction in Philadelphia: A City Building at Record Pace

Philadelphia is in the middle of one of the largest building booms in its modern history. The Center City District’s 2025 development report counted 66 major projects completed, under construction, or planned across Center City alone, with more than 4,000 residential units under construction and over $1.2 billion in active development. University City — where our Philadelphia office sits on Race Street — has added more than 2.7 million square feet of new lab, office, and residential space. High-rise towers are climbing across Rittenhouse, Market West, and North Broad, alongside major infrastructure work like the Park at Penn’s Landing capping I-95.

Every one of those projects puts construction workers at height, around heavy equipment, and alongside multiple contractors and subcontractors — exactly the conditions that produce the most serious injuries. High-rise and mid-rise work means falls from scaffolding and elevated decks. Dense urban sites mean crane, hoist, and struck-by hazards. And compressed schedules on large projects mean more crews from more companies working on top of one another, which is precisely where third-party liability arises.

If you are hurt on a Philadelphia job site, you have access to some of the best trauma care in the region. Penn Presbyterian Medical Center in University City operates a Level I Regional Resource Trauma Center, and the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, and Temple University Hospital all treat serious construction trauma. Orthopedic and hand injuries common in construction work are treated at facilities such as the Rothman Institute and the Philadelphia Hand Center.

When a claim is disputed, Philadelphia workers’ compensation cases are heard before Workers’ Compensation Judges at the Philadelphia Workers’ Compensation Hearing Office at 110 North 8th Street in Center City. We know that office, the judges who sit there, and the defense firms that represent the insurance carriers and contractors in this city. Our Philadelphia office at 3415 Race Street puts us minutes from both the hearing office and the University City and Center City job sites where many of these injuries happen.

Third-Party Claims — Going Beyond Workers’ Compensation

Workers’ compensation does not cover pain and suffering. But many Philadelphia construction accidents involve negligent third parties — contractors, subcontractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, or other companies on the job site who are not your direct employer. When a third party’s negligence contributed to your injury, you can pursue a separate personal injury lawsuit against them in addition to your workers’ comp claim.

This dual-track approach is one of the most important and underutilized rights available to injured construction workers. Our attorneys evaluate every construction accident for third-party liability so no source of compensation is left on the table.

Common Third-Party Defendants in Philadelphia Construction Accidents

  • General contractors who failed to maintain a safe job site
  • Subcontractors whose employees caused the accident
  • Property owners who had control over dangerous conditions
  • Equipment manufacturers whose defective products caused injury
  • Architects or engineers whose design errors created hazards
  • Municipalities responsible for unsafe road or utility conditions

Common Construction Accidents We Handle in Philadelphia

Falls from Heights

Scaffolding collapses, ladder accidents, roof falls, and unprotected floor openings — the leading cause of construction fatalities in Pennsylvania.

Struck-By Accidents

Falling tools, swinging equipment, or vehicles on active Philadelphia job sites. Often involve third-party liability against equipment operators or site managers.

Caught-In/Between

Machinery entrapment, trench collapses, and cave-ins. Frequently involve OSHA violations that strengthen both workers’ comp and personal injury claims.

Electrocution

Contact with live wires, faulty equipment, or improper grounding on construction sites throughout Philadelphia including new residential and commercial developments.

Tool & Equipment Accidents

Defective power tools, improperly maintained heavy equipment, and inadequate safety guards — may support product liability claims against manufacturers.

Toxic Exposure

Asbestos, silica dust, lead paint, and chemical exposure on older Philadelphia structures — may give rise to occupational disease claims in addition to WC benefits.

How OSHA Violations Strengthen Your Claim

When a Philadelphia construction accident involves a violation of OSHA safety standards — failure to provide fall protection, inadequate training, missing guardrails, improper scaffolding — those violations are powerful evidence of negligence in both your workers’ compensation case and any third-party personal injury claim. Our attorneys investigate OSHA compliance on every construction accident case and use violations to maximize your recovery.

Independent Contractors and Misclassification

Some construction employers attempt to classify workers as independent contractors to avoid paying workers’ compensation coverage. Under Pennsylvania law, the classification of a worker as an independent contractor does not automatically mean you are excluded from workers’ comp. Our attorneys evaluate the true nature of the employment relationship and challenge improper classifications that deprive injured workers of benefits they are legally entitled to.

Statute of Limitations for Philadelphia Construction Accident Claims

Pennsylvania law sets strict deadlines, and missing any one of them can permanently end your right to compensation. There are three separate clocks every injured Philadelphia construction worker needs to know:

  • 120 days to report your injury. You must notify your employer within 120 days of the accident. If you report within the first 21 days, wage-loss benefits can be paid from the date of injury; reporting later can delay when benefits begin. Miss the 120-day window entirely and the insurer can deny your claim outright.
  • 3 years to file a Claim Petition. If your employer or their insurer denies, disputes, or stops your benefits, you have three years from the date of injury to file a formal Claim Petition with the Pennsylvania Bureau of Workers’ Compensation. For occupational diseases such as silica or asbestos exposure, the period runs from when you knew or should have known the condition was work-related.
  • 2 years for a third-party lawsuit. If a negligent third party contributed to your injury, you have two years from the date of the accident to bring a separate personal injury lawsuit against them.

These deadlines are not technicalities — missing any one of them can eliminate your right to compensation no matter how serious your injuries are. You can review the Commonwealth’s official workers’ compensation information through the Pennsylvania Department of Labor & Industry, then contact us as soon as possible after any workplace injury in Philadelphia.

Why Choose Lerner Steinberg & Associates?

With over 34 years of experience representing injured workers and accident victims throughout Philadelphia, Mike Lerner and Ben Steinberg handle construction accident cases personally. We pursue every available avenue of compensation — workers’ comp, third-party personal injury, and product liability — so injured construction workers can pursue the full compensation they are owed. All cases are handled on a contingency fee basis — no fee unless we win.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sue someone other than my employer after a Philadelphia construction accident?
Yes. While workers’ compensation bars a lawsuit directly against your employer, it does not prevent you from suing negligent third parties — general contractors, subcontractors, property owners, equipment manufacturers, or other companies whose negligence contributed to your injury. These third-party claims allow you to recover pain and suffering, which workers’ comp does not cover. Our attorneys evaluate every construction accident for third-party liability.
What benefits am I entitled to after a construction accident in Pennsylvania?
Pennsylvania workers’ compensation covers all reasonable and necessary medical treatment related to your injury, wage loss benefits equal to approximately two-thirds of your average weekly wage, specific loss benefits for permanent impairment of a body part or limb, and death benefits for surviving family members in fatal accidents. These benefits apply regardless of how the accident occurred or who was at fault.
What if my employer says I was an independent contractor and not covered by workers’ comp?
Employer classification of a worker as an independent contractor does not automatically exclude them from workers’ compensation coverage in Pennsylvania. The law looks at the actual nature of the work relationship — how much control the employer exercised, whether the work was integral to the business, and other factors. Many workers classified as independent contractors are actually employees entitled to full workers’ comp coverage. Do not accept an employer’s classification without consulting an attorney.
How long do I have to report a construction injury in Pennsylvania?
You must report a work injury to your employer within 120 days of the accident to preserve your right to workers’ compensation benefits. Failure to report within 21 days may delay the start of your benefits. To file a Claim Petition, you generally have three years from the date of injury. Report your injury in writing as soon as possible and contact an attorney before speaking to your employer’s insurance company.
Can I receive workers’ comp and sue a third party at the same time?
Yes, though the two claims interact. If you recover money from a third-party lawsuit, Pennsylvania workers’ compensation law gives the insurer a right to be reimbursed for some of what they paid you — called a subrogation lien. However, the combined recovery from both claims typically far exceeds what workers’ comp alone would provide, especially once pain and suffering damages are included. Our attorneys handle both claims together to maximize your total recovery.
Where are Philadelphia workers’ compensation hearings held?
Philadelphia workers’ compensation cases are heard before Workers’ Compensation Judges at the Philadelphia Workers’ Compensation Hearing Office at 110 North 8th Street in Center City. If you disagree with a judge’s decision, you can appeal to the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board, and from there to the Commonwealth Court. Our Philadelphia office on Race Street is minutes from the hearing office, and we know the judges and defense firms that handle these cases in the city.

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Hurt on a Philadelphia construction site? Call us now — the insurance company is already building their file.

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Types of Claims We Pursue

  • Workers’ compensation benefits
  • Third-party personal injury claims
  • Product liability (defective equipment)
  • OSHA violation-based negligence
  • Wrongful death claims

Key Deadlines

120 days to report injury to employer
3 years to file a Claim Petition
2 years to file a third-party personal injury lawsuit

Why Choose Us

  • 34+ years in Pennsylvania workers’ comp
  • We pursue WC + third-party claims together
  • Direct access to Mike Lerner & Ben Steinberg
  • University City office — local Philadelphia knowledge
  • No fee unless we recover for you