You got hurt at work. Maybe you hoped the pain would pass. Maybe you didn't know Missouri's 30-day reporting rule existed.
Now more than a month has gone by, and you're wondering whether your workers' compensation claim is still alive.
A late injury report doesn't automatically end your claim under Missouri workers' compensation law. But it gives the insurance company a weapon — and they will use it.
What happens next depends on the facts, how much time has passed, and whether the insurer can prove it was actually harmed by the delay.
Missouri's 30-Day Injury Reporting Deadline
Under RSMo § 287.420, an employee must notify their employer of a workplace injury within 30 days of the accident.
Prompt reporting gives the employer and its insurance carrier an opportunity to investigate the accident, secure the worksite, and direct early medical treatment.
The 30-day clock starts on the date of the workplace injury — not the date you first saw a doctor, and not the date you decided the pain was serious enough to report.
Strict deadlines exist throughout Missouri workers compensation law, but missing them doesn't always mean losing your claim. Context and facts matter.
Written Notice vs. Verbal Reports
Missouri law does not require written notice. Verbal reports to a supervisor or manager can satisfy the notice requirement.
If you told your boss what happened on the day it happened, that verbal notice likely counts — even if you never filled out a formal incident report.
The problem is proving it. Insurance companies routinely dispute verbal reports, claiming the employer had no knowledge of the work injury.
Text messages, emails, and witness statements help establish that the employer was aware of the workplace injury even when no formal written notice was filed on time.
What Late Reporting Actually Means for Your Claim
Missing the 30-day deadline gives the insurance carrier a defense. It does not give them an automatic win.
Missouri courts have been clear that late notice bars a workers compensation claim only under specific circumstances.
Late Notice Is Not an Automatic Bar
Missouri workers' compensation law requires that the employer or insurer prove they were actually prejudiced by the delayed report before a late-notice defense succeeds.
Many workers assume that filing outside the window ends their claim. That's not what Missouri law says.
If the employer had actual knowledge of the injury — through a supervisor who witnessed the accident, co-workers who were present — the insurance carrier may not be able to claim prejudice.
The employer can't argue it was harmed by not knowing about an injury it already knew about. In those situations, even a denied claim based on late reporting can be challenged.
The same logic applies when the delay didn't actually prevent a proper investigation. If the accident scene was preserved and witnesses are available, the insurer's prejudice argument weakens significantly.
What "Prejudice" Means to an Insurance Company
Prejudice means the employer suffered a concrete disadvantage because of the late report — the inability to investigate the accident scene, obtain witness statements, or direct early medical treatment.
Whether this argument holds up depends on the facts of your case and whether the employer had actual knowledge through other means.
Medical evidence matters here too. If your treatment records consistently document the work-related nature of the injury, that medical evidence supports your claim even when the formal report was late.
Occupational Diseases and Repetitive Stress Injuries
For injuries that develop gradually — occupational diseases, repetitive stress injuries, chemical exposure — the 30-day reporting window works differently.
Many workers don't connect these conditions to workplace exposure until well after symptoms first appear, and Missouri workers compensation law accounts for this.
For conditions where an injury developed over time, the 30-day clock starts when the worker has reasonable knowledge that the illness is work-related — not when symptoms first appeared.
A worker with repetitive stress injuries may not know their condition is connected to their work duties until a doctor makes the connection. In that case, the 30-day window starts from when the injury qualifies as reasonably discoverable.
Many workers who suffer work related injuries through occupational diseases have more time to report than they realize. Consult an attorney before assuming your claim is too late.
The Two-Year Window to File a Formal Claim
Separate from the 30-day employer notice requirement is the statute of limitations to file a formal claim with the Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation.
Under RSMo § 287.430, injured workers have a two year window — two years from the date of injury or two years from the last payment of compensation — to file their claim.
Missing the two years deadline is much harder to overcome than the 30-day notice issue. Unlike the notice rule, the statute of limitations is close to an absolute bar.
The Labor and Industrial Relations Commission and Missouri courts have been strict about this deadline. If you're approaching two years from your injury date, contact an attorney immediately.
Steps to Take If You Reported Late
If you missed the 30-day window, act now. File a written injury report with your employer today — email it for a timestamped record.
State when the injury occurred, how it happened, what body parts are affected, and that you are providing written notice under RSMo § 287.420.
Gather evidence of employer knowledge: text messages about the injury, emails mentioning it, witness statements from co-workers who saw the accident or your symptoms.
Attend all medical appointments and keep complete records of treatment, lost wages, and medical care expenses. Insurance companies look for gaps in medical attention as evidence the injury isn't serious.
Consistent documentation of your medical appointments and how the injury affects work duties becomes the foundation of your workers compensation claim — especially if it gets disputed.
How a Workers' Comp Lawyer Can Help
A late-reported workers comp claim is not a lost cause — but it's a harder fight. This is exactly where legal representation makes a real difference.
An experienced attorney can evaluate whether the insurer can actually prove prejudice, gather evidence of employer knowledge, and represent injured workers before the Division of Workers' Compensation.
Before representing injured workers in court, Chris Miller worked inside the Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation — the state body where disputed workers compensation cases are heard and decided.
He's seen how insurance companies use late reporting to deny legitimate claims, and he knows how to push back on behalf of employees who suffer work related injuries.
There is no upfront cost. Bur Oak Legal handles workers' compensation cases on contingency — no fee unless we win.
If you need a free case evaluation about a late-filed or denied claim in central Missouri, call (573) 499-0200. Free consultations are available by phone — no upfront cost to speak with Chris.