2025 Session Last amended: 2024 session

§ 176.238 — Notice of Discontinuance of Compensation

Plain-Language Summary

Before an employer or insurer can stop paying workers' compensation benefits, they must give the injured worker written notice explaining why. The notice must include medical reports or other evidence supporting the decision. Benefits must continue until the notice is properly filed.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When an employer or insurer wants to stop paying temporary total, temporary partial, or permanent total disability benefits. Who this affects: Injured workers receiving ongoing workers’ compensation payments. Key points: The employer must file the notice with the state and serve it on you. The notice must clearly state the reason and include copies of medical reports being relied on. If you returned to work, payments can stop the day you returned, but the notice must still be filed within 14 days. For other reasons, payments continue until the notice is properly filed. You can object to the discontinuance by requesting an administrative conference (section 176.239) or filing an objection for a full hearing.