Sole Proprietor Exemption for contractors
Most states allow sole proprietors to exclude themselves from workers' compensation requirements. We identify your state's specific rules, verify you meet the eligibility criteria, and complete the exemption paperwork so you're compliant when a GC or inspector asks.

What it covers
- Sole proprietor WC exemption eligibility determination by state
- Exemption application preparation and state agency submission
- Active-work and business-type eligibility verification
- GC certificate of exemption delivery
- Renewal tracking and re-filing before expiration
- Occupational accident insurance placement for injured-owner coverage
Who it's for
- Solo contractors and owner-operators with no employees
- Self-employed tradespeople required to show exemption to GCs
- Sole proprietors currently paying WC premiums on themselves
- Single-person businesses in construction, trades, and specialty services
Why CCA
- Fast eligibility determination — most sole proprietors qualify in their state
- We know the difference between states that auto-exclude and states that require filing
- Occupational accident coverage available alongside your exemption for injury protection
Common questions about sole proprietor exemption
In many states, sole proprietors in construction are excluded from WC requirements by default — but some states require a formal filing to establish and document the exclusion. We tell you which category your state falls into and handle any required filing.
Once you hire a worker — even part-time or casual — your WC obligation may activate for that person. The exemption covers you as the sole owner; it doesn't cover helpers or casual labor. We advise on how to handle occasional help compliantly.
Yes. A valid exemption certificate is the document that proves to a GC that you're legally excluded — not just uninsured. Most GCs accept a state-issued exemption certificate in place of a WC certificate of insurance.
No. The exemption removes you from the WC system; it doesn't provide injury benefits. Occupational accident insurance is a common supplement for sole proprietors who want medical and disability coverage without a full WC policy.
State filing fees vary — Florida charges $50 per certificate. Our service fee covers preparation, submission, and tracking. We quote the total cost up front, no surprises.
Yes. Contractors Choice Agency advises on exemption eligibility in all 50 states and files in every state with a formal exemption or election process.
Florida exemptions typically issue within 1–3 business days. Other states vary. We file same-day on receipt of your information and track status until your certificate arrives.
Often yes. Denials usually stem from incomplete applications or a business structure mismatch. We review what went wrong and refile correctly.
Yes. Many contractors who file exemptions choose occupational accident insurance as an alternative to WC for themselves. We can place that alongside your exemption filing in one call.
A Texas non-subscriber has opted out of the state workers' comp system. Non-subscribers can be sued for negligence without standard WC defenses. We help Texas contractors understand the risk and choose the right alternative.
In most states, yes. LLC members and corporate officers can each file individual exemptions. The ownership percentage, active-work requirements, and form vary by state.
We track your expiration date and send you an advance alert before renewal is due. Florida exemptions expire every two years; other states vary.
No. An exemption removes you from the WC system; it doesn't limit a third party's ability to sue you for negligence on a job site. General liability still matters.
A prior claim doesn't disqualify you from filing an exemption — eligibility is based on your business structure and state rules, not claim history.
Some GCs require all subs to carry WC regardless of exemption status. We can place a workers' comp policy for you if a client specifically requires coverage rather than a certificate.
Your state, business structure (sole prop, LLC, S-corp), trade type, owner count, Federal EIN, and contractor license number where applicable. A 15-minute call covers it all.
Yes. Occupational accident insurance provides medical and disability benefits at a fraction of WC cost and is often the right solution for owners who file exemptions but want some injury protection.
Your exemption covers you as an owner — employees hired after the fact still need workers' comp coverage unless they file their own exemptions. We handle both.
Pair it with related coverage
Ready to file your workers' comp exemption?
Get a 15-minute consultation from specialists who know your state's exemption rules — sole proprietor, LLC, corporate officer, or contractor filing.