Claim intake
First report of injury captured through a structured workflow connected to the original incident report.
Solutions
Claims, carriers, medical management, indemnity, return to work, and litigation — tracked in one place from first report to close.
The average workers' comp claim costs $47,316. Claims reported late cost 45-50% more than those reported within 24 hours. And most of that delay isn't intentional — it happens because the reporting process is fragmented across HR, safety, and supervisors who don't know what to do.
InfraNet structures workers' comp from the moment an incident occurs — so reporting happens on time, documentation is complete, and nothing falls through the gap between departments.
First report of injury captured through a structured workflow connected to the original incident report.
Carrier information, claim numbers, contacts, and correspondence tracked per claim.
Treating physicians, medical restrictions, appointments, and medical records tracked throughout the claim.
Wage replacement, TTD, TPD, and settlement information tracked and documented.
Modified duty offers, return dates, restrictions, and work status tracked through closure.
Attorney involvement, litigation status, and legal correspondence tracked when claims escalate.
$47,316
Average cost of a single workers' comp claim (NSC/NCCI 2023).
45-50%
Cost increase for claims reported late vs. within 24 hours.
$1B
Employers pay approximately $1 billion per week in workers' comp costs (NSC).