FormifyAI
PricingStatesGuidesBlog
(978) 321-0417Sign InGet Started
SOC 2 Compliant
256-bit SSL
4.9/5 rated
All 50 states
FormifyAI

Form your LLC in any U.S. state with a flat monthly plan. Registered agent, operating agreement, EIN filing, and compliance tracking — all included. No surprise upsells.

support@formifyai.app
(978) 321-0417
4.9· 150+ LLCs filed

Product

  • LLC Formation
  • Registered Agent
  • EIN Application
  • Annual Reports
  • Add-ons
  • Pricing

Resources

  • LLC Guides
  • Blog
  • LLC by State
  • LLC by Industry
  • Compare
  • LLC Name Tool

Company

  • About
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Investors
  • Help Center
  • Affiliate Program

From the same team

InsurifyAI

Business insurance marketplace

DisputeAI

AI credit dispute letters

Pointify Travels

Business travel + points

SubScrub

Subscription management

DebtShield

Debt collection letter review

Not a law firm. FormifyAI is not a law firm or substitute for an attorney. We provide business formation filing services and document preparation self-help. Information on this site is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For questions about your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney.

© 2026FormifyAI. A product of InsurifyAI LLC · Nashua, NH

Registered Agent: 221 Main St, Ste A, Nashua, NH 03060

PrivacyTermsRefundsCookies
catch us if you can
New Hampshire

New Hampshire Workers' Compensation for LLCs

Complete 2026 guide to New Hampshire workers' compensation requirements for LLC owners — employee thresholds, premium ranges, owner exemptions, and penalties.

Is workers' comp required in New Hampshire?

Yes — 1+ employee in most states

Avg premium

$300-$3,500/yr/employee (varies by industry)

Owner coverage

Corporate officers + LLC members often can waive/exempt

Penalties for Non-Compliance in New Hampshire

Fines, penalties, and loss of common-law defenses vary by state

How to Get Workers' Comp in New Hampshire

  1. 1

    Determine if you need coverage

    New Hampshire generally requires WC for 1+ employee in most states.

  2. 2

    Classify employees

    Group by industry class code (NCCI or state equivalent). Each class has a base rate — office workers are cheapest; construction/roofing most expensive.

  3. 3

    Get quotes from 3+ carriers

    Rates vary 30%+ for identical coverage. The Hartford, Liberty Mutual, Hiscox, Next Insurance, Pie Insurance are common choices. State-run programs (OH/WA) are the only option in some states.

  4. 4

    Choose deductible + policy limits

    Higher deductible = lower premium but more out-of-pocket for smaller claims. Typical coverage limits: $100K/occurrence, $500K/aggregate, $1M disease limit.

  5. 5

    Bind coverage before first day of work

    Do not let a new employee start before the WC policy is active. A workplace injury in the gap = personal liability + state penalties.

  6. 6

    Post state-required notice

    Most states require posting a workers' comp notice in the workplace listing the carrier's name and claims contact info.

  7. 7

    Renew annually + adjust for payroll

    Premiums adjust based on actual payroll (audit at end of policy year). Underreport payroll = fraud risk; overreport = lose premium to refund.

FAQ

Does my New Hampshire LLC need workers' compensation insurance?

Yes, New Hampshire generally requires workers' comp for 1+ employee in most states.

How much does workers' comp cost in New Hampshire?

$300-$3,500/yr/employee (varies by industry). Rate depends on industry class code (office: $300-$800; retail: $800-$2,500; construction: $3,000-$15,000 per employee annually). Premiums also vary by experience modifier (past claims history) and state-level fund vs private insurer.

Do LLC owners need workers' comp coverage for themselves?

Corporate officers + LLC members often can waive/exempt. Sole proprietor LLC owners typically don't need to cover themselves, but if you hire even one employee, you usually must buy workers' comp. LLC members providing services may be treated as employees for WC purposes in some states.

What's the penalty for not carrying workers' comp in New Hampshire?

Fines, penalties, and loss of common-law defenses vary by state. Beyond state fines, going uninsured makes you personally liable for 100% of any employee injury costs (medical, lost wages, disability) plus common-law damages. A single serious injury can exceed $100K-$500K.

How do I get workers' comp insurance for my New Hampshire LLC?

Shop multiple carriers — rates vary 30%+ for identical coverage. Major carriers: The Hartford, Liberty Mutual, Travelers, Hiscox, Next Insurance, Pie Insurance. Industry-specific: The Workers' Compensation Bureau (for high-risk), or state-run programs in OH/WA/WY/ND. Get quotes from 3+ carriers before buying.

Do I need workers' comp for 1099 contractors in New Hampshire?

Generally no — true independent contractors aren't covered by workers' comp (they're not employees). But misclassification is a big risk: if the state later reclassifies a 1099 as a W-2 (via IRS 20-factor test or state ABC test), you'll owe back WC premiums + penalties + potential injury liability. Carefully verify contractor classification — see our [W-2 vs 1099 guide](/blog/w2-vs-1099-worker-classification-llc).

Planning to hire in New Hampshire?

Read our complete first-hire playbook — loaded cost math, employer setup, workers' comp, payroll, and onboarding.

First hire playbookNew Hampshire LLC hub