Don't Accept a
Low Permanent Disability Rating
Get What You Deserve

Don't Accept a
Low Permanent Disability Rating
Get What You Deserve

Board-Certified Specialist | Maximizing Disability Ratings Since 2022 | Free Rating Review

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Certified Specialist in California Workers’ Compensation

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YEARS OF EXPERIENCE

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RECOVERED FOR CLIENTS

NO FEES UNTIL YOU WIN

NO FEES UNTIL YOU WIN

Your Permanent Disability Rating Determines Your Financial Future

When your work injury results in lasting impairment—meaning you’ll never fully recover—you’re entitled to permanent disability (PD) benefits. The amount you receive depends on your permanent disability rating, expressed as a percentage from 1% to 100%.

Here’s the problem: Insurance companies routinely underrate permanent disability. Their doctors minimize your impairment, apply excessive apportionment (claiming your disability was pre-existing), or make calculation errors that can cost you tens of thousands of dollars—or more.

A difference of just a few percentage points can mean $20,000, $50,000, or even $100,000+ in lost benefits.

At the Law Office of Joseph T. Todoroff, we specialize in maximizing permanent disability ratings for injured workers throughout Northern California. As a Board-Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, Joseph understands the complex permanent disability rating system and knows how to fight for accurate ratings that reflect the true extent of your impairment.

Don’t leave money on the table. Let us review your permanent disability rating for free.

Understanding Permanent Disability

What is Permanent Disability?

Permanent disability means you've reached maximum medical improvement—you're as good as you're going to get—but you still have lasting impairment from your work injury. This impairment may affect your ability to work, perform daily activities, or enjoy life as you did before your injury.

Permanent disability is NOT the same as:

  • Total disability – You can still work in some capacity
  • Social Security disability – Different system with different standards
  • Long-term disability insurance – Private insurance, separate from workers’ comp

Types of Permanent Disability:

Permanent Partial Disability (PPD)

You have lasting impairment but can still work in some capacity. This is the most common type of permanent disability. Ratings typically range from 1% to 99%.

Permanent Total Disability (PTD)

Your work injury has left you unable to engage in any gainful employment. This is rare and typically reserved for catastrophic injuries like paralysis or severe brain injury. Rated at 100%.

How Permanent Disability Ratings Work

The 5-Step Rating Process

Step 1: Permanent and Stationary (P&S) Status

Before you can receive a permanent disability rating, your doctor must declare you “permanent and stationary”—meaning:

  • You’ve reached maximum medical improvement
  • Your condition is unlikely to improve with further treatment
  • Your permanent limitations can now be assessed

Timing:
Most injured workers reach P&S status 12-24 months after injury, though some reach it sooner or later depending on injury severity and treatment response.

Step 2: Impairment Rating Using AMA Guides

A physician evaluates your impairment using the American Medical Association (AMA) Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, Fifth Edition.

The Doctor Assesses:

  • Range of motion limitations
  • Strength deficits
  • Sensory losses
  • Organ function impairment
  • Pain levels
  • Loss of use

Each body part is rated separately:

  • Spine injuries
  • Upper extremity injuries (shoulder, arm, hand)
  • Lower extremity injuries (hip, leg, foot)
  • Internal organs
  • Psychiatric impairment
  • Multiple body parts (combined rating)

The result: A whole person impairment (WPI) percentage

Step 3: Convert to Permanent Disability Using California Formula

California converts the WPI percentage to a permanent disability percentage using complex formulas that consider:

Age: Younger workers receive higher PD percentages (longer working life ahead)

Occupation: Based on your job at time of injury:

  • Group 1: Professional, executive, managerial
  • Group 2: Semi-skilled, clerical
  • Group 3: Skilled labor
  • Group 4: Semi-skilled labor
  • Group 5: Unskilled labor

Higher occupational groups generally result in lower PD ratings (more alternative jobs available)

Adjustment Factors:
California uses adjustment tables that can increase or decrease the PD percentage based on age and occupation

The result: Your permanent disability percentage (1% to 100%)

Step 4: Calculate Monetary Value

Your PD percentage is multiplied by your average weekly earnings to determine the dollar value:

Permanent Partial Disability:

  • PD percentage × weeks of compensation (based on rating) × payment rate (based on earnings)
  • Paid either as biweekly payments or lump sum settlement

Permanent Total Disability:

  • Lifetime weekly payments equal to 2/3 of your average weekly wage (subject to minimum/maximum)
  • Paid for life

Example Calculation:
45% PD rating for a worker earning $1,000/week might result in total benefits of $150,000+, while 35% might only yield $90,000. The 10% difference equals $60,000.

Step 5: Apply Apportionment (If Applicable)

Apportionment reduces your PD award by allocating a portion of your disability to non-industrial causes:

  • Pre-existing conditions
  • Prior injuries
  • Degenerative conditions
  • Congenital defects
  • Other pathology unrelated to work

Example:
Your total disability is rated at 50%, but the doctor apportions 20% to pre-existing arthritis. Your work-related PD becomes 30% (50% – 20% = 30%), significantly reducing your benefits.

This is where insurance companies most aggressively fight to reduce your benefits.

Common Permanent Disability Issues

How Insurance Companies Reduce Your Rating

1. Underrating Impairment

The Problem:
Insurance company doctors minimize the severity of your impairment using:

  • Overly optimistic assessments of range of motion
  • Downplaying pain levels
  • Ignoring functional limitations
  • Using improper rating methodology
  • Failing to rate all affected body parts

Real Example:
You have severe shoulder pain limiting overhead activities. The insurance doctor finds “full range of motion” by having you move your arm while lying down (gravity-assisted), then concludes no significant impairment—even though you can’t lift your arm overhead while standing.

How We Fight It:

  • Obtain thorough evaluation from qualified medical evaluator
  • Video documentation of functional limitations
  • Multiple physician opinions
  • Challenge improper rating methodology
  • Ensure all affected body parts are rated

2. Excessive Apportionment

The Problem:
Insurance doctors aggressively apportion disability to non-industrial causes, claiming most of your disability is from:

  • Normal aging
  • Pre-existing arthritis
  • Prior injuries (even minor ones)
  • Degenerative disc disease
  • Obesity
  • “Constitutional factors”

Common Apportionment Tactics:

  • Finding pre-existing conditions on old X-rays that never caused problems
  • Attributing cumulative trauma entirely to non-work activities
  • Claiming degenerative changes would have occurred anyway
  • Excessive apportionment based on age alone

Real Example:
A 55-year-old construction worker suffers a new herniated disc from lifting at work. Insurance doctor sees some degenerative changes on MRI and apportions 80% to “age-related degeneration,” despite the fact the worker was asymptomatic before the work injury.

How We Fight It:

  • Establish you were asymptomatic before work injury
  • Distinguish new acute injury from pre-existing condition
  • Show work substantially contributed to disability
  • Challenge unsupported apportionment opinions
  • Obtain medical evidence showing distinct new injury

Legal Standard:
Apportionment must be based on substantial medical evidence—not speculation. If doctors can’t reliably separate industrial from non-industrial causes, no apportionment should apply.

3. Combining Multiple Body Parts (Combined Values Chart)

The Problem:
When multiple body parts are injured, they’re combined using the Combined Values Chart—which results in a combined rating that’s LESS than the sum of individual ratings.

Example:

  • 20% PD for shoulder = 20%
  • 15% PD for knee = 15%
  • Sum would be 35%, but combined chart gives only 32%

Why This Happens:
The Combined Values Chart is based on actuarial assumptions about disability—it assumes multiple disabilities don’t simply add together.

The Insurance Company Tactic:
They try to rate body parts separately at lower percentages, resulting in even smaller combined ratings.

How We Fight It:

  • Ensure each body part is rated at maximum appropriate level
  • Consider whether injuries should be rated together as one body region
  • Challenge arbitrary separation of body parts
  • Fight for accurate individual ratings before combining

4. Failing to Rate Psychiatric Impairment

The Problem:
Many injured workers develop secondary psychiatric conditions from their injuries:

  • Depression from chronic pain
  • Anxiety about financial future
  • PTSD from traumatic workplace incidents
  • Sleep disorders
  • Social isolation due to disability

Insurance companies often:

  • Ignore psychiatric symptoms
  • Claim psychiatric injury doesn’t meet threshold for compensation
  • Refuse to evaluate psychiatric component
  • Minimize psychological impact

How We Fight It:

  • Document psychiatric symptoms and treatment
  • Obtain psychiatric evaluation and rating
  • Establish compensability of psychiatric injury
  • Add psychiatric rating to physical impairment rating

Important: Psychiatric impairment can add significant percentage points to your overall PD rating.

Disputes Over Future Medical Care

The Problem:
Even if you get a fair PD rating, the insurance company may try to limit or eliminate future medical care—arguing you don’t need ongoing treatment.

Why This Matters:
Future medical care can be worth more than your PD award over time, especially for serious injuries requiring ongoing treatment.

How We Protect Your Rights:

  • Ensure future medical care is preserved in settlement
  • Document ongoing treatment needs
  • Obtain life care plans for catastrophic injuries
  • Structure settlements to protect medical benefits
  • Address Medicare Set-Aside requirements

Qualified Medical Evaluators (QME)
and Agreed Medical Evaluators (AME)

Getting the Right Doctor Makes All the Difference

When there’s a dispute over your permanent disability rating, a medical evaluator provides the critical opinion that determines your benefits.

Qualified Medical Evaluator (QME)

What is a QME?
A physician certified by the state to perform workers’ compensation medical evaluations when there’s no attorney for both sides or when the parties can’t agree on a doctor.

QME Selection:

  • Division of Workers’ Compensation provides panel of 3 names
  • You strike one, insurance company strikes one
  • Remaining doctor becomes your QME

Why Selection Matters:
Not all QMEs are equal. Some consistently favor insurance companies, while others provide thorough, fair evaluations. Our knowledge of QME reputations and track records gives you a strategic advantage.

Agreed Medical Evaluator (AME)

What is an AME?
When both sides have attorneys, you can agree on a medical evaluator rather than using the QME panel process.

Benefits of AME:

  • Both sides select doctor together
  • Generally more balanced and credible
  • AME reports are given more weight by judges
  • Can select doctor with specific expertise

How We Use AME Process:

  • Negotiate with insurance company for fair, qualified evaluator
  • Select physicians with expertise in your specific injury
  • Avoid biased evaluators on both sides
  • Ensure thorough, comprehensive evaluation

Preparing for Your Medical Evaluation

Whether QME or AME, proper preparation maximizes your chances of an accurate rating:

Before the Exam:

  • Gather all medical records
  • List all symptoms and limitations
  • Document how injury affects daily life and work
  • Bring medications list
  • Prepare list of questions

During the Exam:

  • Be honest and thorough
  • Don’t minimize symptoms
  • Describe your worst days, not best days
  • Explain how injury affects work and daily activities
  • Provide specific examples of limitations

After the Exam:

  • Request copy of report
  • Review carefully for errors
  • Identify any inaccuracies
  • Notify us of concerns immediately

Maximizing Your Permanent Disability Rating

Our Strategic Approach

At the Law Office of Joseph T. Todoroff, we use a comprehensive strategy to maximize permanent disability ratings:

Step 1: Thorough Case Evaluation

We Analyze:

  • Your medical records and treatment history
  • Prior PD ratings and medical reports
  • All affected body parts
  • Potential for psychiatric injury rating
  • Apportionment issues
  • Calculation methodology

Step 2: Strategic QME/AME Selection

We Ensure:

  • Selection of qualified, fair evaluators
  • Doctors with expertise in your injury type
  • Research of evaluator track records
  • Strategic striking on QME panels
  • Negotiation for appropriate AME when possible

Step 3: Comprehensive Medical Evidence

We Develop:

  • Detailed injury documentation
  • Functional capacity evaluations
  • Vocational assessments
  • Psychiatric evaluations when appropriate
  • Multiple medical opinions if needed
  • Video or photographic evidence of limitations

Step 4: Proper Rating Methodology

We Ensure:

  • All body parts are properly rated
  • Correct AMA Guides sections are used
  • Age and occupation factors are properly applied
  • Combined values are calculated correctly
  • No improper deductions or errors

Step 5: Fight Excessive Apportionment

We Challenge:

  • Unsupported apportionment opinions
  • Speculation about pre-existing conditions
  • Excessive attribution to non-work factors
  • Age-based apportionment without medical basis
  • Apportionment when you were asymptomatic before injury

Step 6: Maximize Total Recovery

We Pursue:

  • Highest supportable PD rating
  • Additional psychiatric rating when appropriate
  • Supplemental Job Displacement Benefits (SJDB)
  • Future medical care provisions
  • Life pension for ratings over 70%
  • Third-party claims when applicable

Life Pension for High PD Ratings

Enhanced Benefits for Severe Disabilities

Life Pension Eligibility:

If your permanent disability rating is 70% or higher, you qualify for a “life pension”—enhanced benefits paid for life instead of a fixed number of weeks.

Life Pension Benefits:
  • Weekly payments for life (or until age 70 minimum)
  • Increased payment amounts
  • Cost of living adjustments
  • Significantly greater total value
Example:

A 50-year-old worker with 70% PD receiving life pension might receive $500,000+ in lifetime benefits, compared to $200,000 for the same rating paid over a fixed period.

Why This Matters:

Insurance companies aggressively fight to keep PD ratings below 70% to avoid life pension obligations. They’ll use every tactic to rate you at 68% or 69% instead of 70%.

How We Fight:

We ensure every percentage point is properly calculated and fight aggressively when ratings are close to life pension thresholds. The difference between 69% and 70% can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Supplemental Job Displacement Benefits (SJDB)

Retraining Vouchers When You Can’t Return to Your Job

If your permanent disability prevents you from returning to your previous job, you may be entitled to Supplemental Job Displacement Benefits:

SJDB Voucher:
  • Up to $6,000 for education, retraining, or skill enhancement
  • Can be used for community college, vocational training, certifications
  • Pays for tuition, books, fees, and related expenses
Eligibility:
  • Employer doesn’t offer modified or alternative work within your restrictions
  • Your permanent disability prevents return to usual occupation
  • Not available if you’re permanent and total
How We Help:
  • Establish your inability to return to previous work
  • Fight employer claims of available modified work
  • Ensure you receive maximum SJDB benefits
  • Negotiate SJDB voucher value in settlements

Settlement Options for Permanent Disability

Understanding Your Choices

When your permanent disability case is ready to resolve, you generally have two settlement options:

Compromise and Release (C&R)

Lump Sum Settlement:
  • One-time payment settling all claims
  • Closes your case entirely
  • Gives up future medical care (unless Medicare Set-Aside included)
  • Gives up right to reopen for new and further disability
Advantages:
  • Immediate payment of full amount
  • Certainty—no ongoing involvement with insurance company
  • Can invest or use funds as you see fit
  • No waiting for biweekly payments
Disadvantages:
  • Lose future medical care
  • No reopening if condition worsens
  • Must address Medicare Set-Aside if applicable
  • Settlement is final

Stipulations with Request for Award (Stips)

Structured Award:
  • Agree on permanent disability rating
  • Receive biweekly payments over time
  • Keep case open for future medical care
  • Retain limited right to reopen
Advantages:
  • Retain future medical care for life
  • Can reopen for new and further disability in some cases
  • Guaranteed payment schedule
  • No Medicare Set-Aside issues
Disadvantages:
  • No lump sum payment
  • Payments spread over months or years
  • Ongoing relationship with insurance company
  • Limited access to funds

Which Settlement is Right for You?

Factors to Consider:
  • Your future medical needs
  • Your age and health
  • Whether you’ll be Medicare-eligible
  • Need for immediate funds vs. guaranteed income
  • Tax implications
  • Financial management ability
We Help You Decide:
  • Analyze your specific situation
  • Calculate present value of different options
  • Address Medicare Set-Aside requirements
  • Negotiate best terms under either option
  • Ensure you make informed decision

Common Questions About Permanent Disability

How is permanent disability different from temporary disability?

Temporary disability pays wage replacement while you’re recovering (2/3 of wages, capped). Permanent disability compensates you for lasting impairment after you reach maximum medical improvement. Temporary disability stops when you’re permanent and stationary; permanent disability benefits begin at that point.

Can I work while receiving permanent disability benefits?

Yes. Permanent partial disability means you have lasting impairment but can still work. Benefits compensate for reduced earning capacity, not total inability to work. Only permanent total disability (100% rating) means you can’t work at all.

How long does it take to get a permanent disability rating?

It depends on when you reach permanent and stationary status (typically 12-24 months after injury) and whether the rating is disputed. Uncontested ratings can be finalized in a few months. Disputed ratings requiring QME/AME evaluation and possible litigation can take 12-18 months or more.

Can my permanent disability rating change?

Generally, once your case is settled, the rating is final. However, if you settle via Stipulations (not C&R), you can petition to reopen for new and further disability if your condition worsens significantly, subject to strict time limits and requirements.

What if I disagree with my permanent disability rating?

You can challenge it through the QME/AME process, request a different evaluator, obtain rebuttal medical reports, take depositions of doctors, and present evidence at trial. This is exactly why you need an experienced attorney who understands the rating system.

Is permanent disability paid as a lump sum?

It can be, if you settle via Compromise and Release. Otherwise, it’s paid biweekly over a period determined by your rating percentage. For example, a 40% PD rating might pay over 400 weeks (about 8 years).

How much is my permanent disability worth?

It depends on your PD percentage, your average weekly earnings at time of injury, your age, and your occupation. Small percentage differences can mean tens of thousands of dollars. Contact us for a free evaluation of your specific case.

What is apportionment and why does it matter?

Apportionment reduces your PD award by allocating disability to non-work causes (pre-existing conditions, prior injuries, etc.). Excessive apportionment is one of the main ways insurance companies reduce benefits. Fighting improper apportionment can significantly increase your award.

Can I get permanent disability benefits for a back injury when I had prior back problems?

Yes, if the work injury aggravated, accelerated, or worsened your pre-existing condition. The new work-related disability should be rated and compensated. However, expect the insurance company to aggressively apportion to the pre-existing condition—which is why you need strong legal representation.

What happens if I'm rated 100% permanent total disability?

You receive weekly payments (2/3 of your average weekly wage) for life. You also keep the right to all future medical care. This is the highest level of benefits, reserved for catastrophic injuries that leave you unable to engage in any gainful employment.

Don't Accept a Low Rating—Get a Second Opinion

Free Permanent Disability Rating Review

If you’ve received a permanent disability rating from the insurance company, don’t accept it without having it reviewed by an experienced workers’ compensation attorney. Insurance company ratings are almost always lower than what injured workers are entitled to receive.

We offer a free, no-obligation review of your permanent disability rating.

During your review, Joseph will:

  • Analyze your PD rating and supporting medical reports
  • Identify potential errors or undervaluation
  • Explain how apportionment was applied
  • Calculate what your rating should be
  • Explain how we can help increase your rating
  • Answer all your questions

Even a small increase in your PD percentage can mean tens of thousands of dollars in additional benefits.

Don't Face the Insurance Companies Alone

Your Fight is Our Fight. Let's Get Started Today.

You’ve worked hard your entire life. When you’re injured or can’t work due to a disability, you deserve every benefit you’re entitled to under the law. But insurance companies and government agencies don’t make it easy—they’re counting on you to give up or accept less than you deserve.

Don’t let them win.

At the Law Office of Joseph T. Todoroff, we level the playing field. With Board-Certified expertise and a personal commitment to every client, we fight to get you the medical treatment, wage replacement, and disability benefits you need to move forward with your life.

Your consultation is free. You pay nothing unless we win. What do you have to lose?

Office Hours: Monday–Friday, 9:00 AM – 5:00 PM
After-hours appointments available by request

Disclaimer:
The information on this page is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. Workers’ compensation cases have strict deadlines—contact us immediately to protect your rights.

Disclaimer:
The information on this website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.