Kentucky · Lost Wages

Kentucky Lost
Wages Calculator

Calculate lost wages for an injury or employment claim in Kentucky.

17 min readReviewed by the Made for Law editorial team
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Estimate your Kentucky Lost Wages

Calculate lost wages for an injury or employment claim in Kentucky.

· Data sourced from Kentucky statutes and court fee schedules.

Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer

Quick answer

Lost wages claims in Kentucky must be filed within the 1-year statute of limitations for personal injury (Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. §§ 413.140(1)(a), 413.140(1)(e), 413.090). Recoverable damages include salary, bonuses, benefits, and future earning capacity.

Key Takeaways

  • Fault system: Pure comparative fault — recover even at 99% fault
  • Filing deadline: 1 year statute of limitations
  • Min wage: $7.25/hr
  • State income tax applies — affects net lost wages
Kentucky at a glance

Key facts for Kentucky lost wages

SOL (PI)
1 yr
SOL (PI)
Counties
120
Counties
In depth

What drives lost wages in Kentucky

Worker calculating lost wages from injury — Kentucky
Lost Wages Calculator — Kentucky

Lost Wages Claims in Kentucky

Kentucky follows pure comparative fault — you can recover lost wages even if you are more than 50% at fault, with your award reduced by your percentage of responsibility. This makes Kentucky one of the most plaintiff-friendly states for lost wages claims.

Kentucky has a flat income tax rate (currently 4%), simplifying net wage calculations. The state has a strong coal mining industry where occupational disease claims (black lung, hearing loss) involve complex long-term lost earnings projections.

Kentucky gives injured claimants 1 year to file a personal injury lawsuit (Ky. Rev.

Stat. Ann.

§§ 413.140(1)(a), 413.140(1)(e), 413.090). This statute of limitations applies to the underlying tort claim that includes lost wages as a component of damages.

Missing this deadline almost certainly means losing the right to recover any compensation, including lost wages. Workers' compensation claims follow a separate timeline under Ky.

Rev. Stat.

§ 342.001 et seq..

Kentucky follows pure comparative fault, one of the most plaintiff-friendly systems in the country. You can recover proportional lost wages even if you are 99% at fault — your award is simply reduced by your percentage of responsibility.

This is critically different from the majority of states, which bar recovery entirely once you exceed a 50% or 51% fault threshold. In Kentucky, partial fault reduces your recovery but never eliminates it, making comprehensive documentation of every category of lost income worthwhile regardless of the liability picture.

The state minimum wage in Kentucky is $7.25/hr, though most lost wages claimants earn well above the minimum. The minimum wage matters primarily as a floor for workers' compensation benefit calculations and as a reference point for low-wage workers whose total compensation (including tips, overtime, and benefits) may substantially exceed their base rate.

The Kentucky Department of Workers' Claims (DWC) administers all WC claims. Kentucky's maximum weekly WC benefit for temporary total disability is $1,175.84 (2024).

Lost wages PI cases are filed in the Circuit Court of the relevant county — Jefferson County Circuit Court (Louisville) and Fayette County Circuit Court (Lexington) are primary venues. Kentucky's pure comparative fault system allows recovery at any fault level.

The Kentucky Labor Cabinet enforces wage payment laws (KRS Chapter 337). Kentucky does not have its own WARN Act.

Kentucky's 1-year PI statute of limitations (KRS § 413.140) is the shortest in the nation.

What You Can Recover — and What Can Block Recovery — in Kentucky

Kentucky's pure comparative fault system preserves your right to recover lost wages regardless of your fault level. A claimant who is 70% at fault still recovers 30% of their total lost wages.

This means every dollar of documented lost income matters — even in cases where you bear significant responsibility for the injury. Thorough documentation of all income categories directly increases the net recovery.

Base pay and salary are the most straightforward components. For hourly workers, this is your regular hourly rate multiplied by the hours you would have worked during the disability period.

For salaried employees, it is your annual salary prorated for the time missed. Employers typically verify your pay rate, schedule, and employment dates through a wage verification letter, which your attorney can request or subpoena if the employer refuses to cooperate.

Overtime pay is recoverable if you have a documented history of working overtime. Kentucky courts typically look at 6 to 12 months of pay records to establish your average overtime hours.

If you regularly worked 10 hours of overtime per week at 1.5× your regular rate ($7.25/hr minimum), those lost overtime earnings add significantly to the claim. Bonuses and commissions are also recoverable where you can demonstrate a consistent pattern — annual performance bonuses, quarterly sales commissions, and production incentives all qualify if supported by pay history.

Employer-provided benefits are a frequently overlooked but often substantial category. Recoverable benefits include: the employer's share of health insurance premiums (often $500$1,500/month for family coverage), retirement plan contributions (401k matches, pension accruals), paid time off that accrued but cannot be used, life insurance and disability insurance premiums paid by the employer, company vehicle or mileage allowances, tuition reimbursement, and any other fringe benefits specified in your employment agreement.

These benefits can add 25–40% to the base pay calculation.

Future earning capacity is the most complex and often the most valuable category. In cases involving permanent disability or long-term impairment, Kentucky allows recovery for the diminished ability to earn income over your remaining work life.

This requires expert testimony — typically a forensic economist who calculates the present value of future lost earnings, adjusted for work-life expectancy, expected wage growth, inflation, and the discount rate for present value. A vocational rehabilitation specialist may also testify about the specific occupations the claimant can and cannot perform after the injury.

Kentucky's pure comparative fault system means that even a claimant who is 80% at fault can recover 20% of their lost wages. This contrasts sharply with neighboring states like Indiana (51% bar) and Ohio (which uses a modified system).

Kentucky also has a coal workers' pneumoconiosis fund that provides separate benefits for miners with black lung disease, which interacts with standard workers' comp lost wage benefits.

Employee reviewing lost income documentation in Kentucky
Kentucky lost wages calculator

How Lost Wages Are Calculated in Kentucky

The basic lost wages formula in Kentucky is: (Daily/Weekly wage × Days/Weeks missed) + Lost overtime + Lost bonuses + Lost benefits + Future earning capacity (if applicable). For hourly workers earning $7.25/hr or more, multiply your hourly rate by your average daily hours.

For salaried employees, divide your annual salary by 260 working days (52 weeks × 5 days). This produces a daily rate that is then multiplied by the number of work days missed.

The period of disability must be established by medical evidence — not by your own estimate of when you felt well enough to return to work. Kentucky courts require a treating physician's opinion (or an independent medical examiner's report) documenting when the disability began, whether it was total or partial, and when you reached maximum medical improvement (MMI).

If you returned to work in a reduced capacity (part-time or light duty), you can claim the difference between your pre-injury earnings and your actual post-injury earnings as partial lost wages.

Kentucky has a state income tax, which creates a meaningful gap between gross and net lost wages. Courts in Kentucky generally award gross lost wages, but the defense may argue for a net (after-tax) figure to reduce the verdict.

The resolution depends on the type of claim and how the recovery is taxed. For personal injury settlements involving physical injuries, the recovery is typically tax-free under IRC § 104(a)(2) — which means the claimant keeps the gross amount without paying income tax.

In this scenario, awarding gross wages is not a windfall; it is the correct amount because no tax will be owed. For employment claims (wrongful termination, discrimination, retaliation), the recovery is taxable as ordinary income at both the federal and Kentucky state level, and some courts may consider the tax impact in structuring the award.

Understanding the tax treatment is critical for settlement negotiations in Kentucky. If you settle a physical injury claim for $100,000 in lost wages, you keep the full $100,000 (tax-free).

If you settle a wrongful termination claim for $100,000, you may owe $25,000$40,000 in combined federal and Kentucky state income tax, depending on your bracket. Your attorney should factor this tax differential into the demand amount to ensure you net the same after-tax amount regardless of claim type.

Tax gross-up provisions in settlement agreements can address this, though they are more common in employment cases.

Kentucky uses a private workers' compensation insurance market. Employers select their insurer, and benefits are standardized by statute — typically 66⅔% of the average weekly wage for temporary total disability, subject to a statutory maximum.

For third-party tort claims (against someone other than your employer), you can recover full (100%) lost wages through the court system. The workers' comp system provides faster payment (no need to prove fault) but at a reduced rate, while the tort system requires proving fault but allows recovery of the full amount.

Many injured workers pursue both paths simultaneously when a third party is responsible.

Documenting Your Lost Wages Claim in Kentucky

The strength of a lost wages claim in Kentucky depends almost entirely on documentation. Insurance adjusters and defense attorneys will challenge every component of your claim, and the burden of proof is on you to demonstrate what you would have earned but for the injury.

Undocumented claims are routinely discounted by 30–50% or denied entirely.

Essential documents for a Kentucky lost wages claim include: (1) Pay stubs for at least the 6 months before the injury, showing regular hours, overtime, deductions, and year-to-date totals. (2) W-2 forms or complete tax returns for the past 2–3 years, establishing your earning trajectory and any upward trend.

(3) An employer verification letter confirming your job title, start date, hourly rate or salary, regular schedule, overtime history, and benefits package. If your employer refuses to provide this voluntarily, your attorney can obtain it through formal discovery or subpoena.

(4) Medical records from your treating physician documenting the nature of the injury, the period of total disability, any restrictions during partial disability, and the date of maximum medical improvement.

For overtime claims, the most persuasive evidence is a consistent pattern over multiple months or years. A claimant who worked 10 hours of overtime every week for the past year has a much stronger claim than one who worked overtime sporadically.

Kentucky courts generally look at the 6–12 months before the injury to establish an overtime baseline, and any material deviation (e.g., seasonal variations, a recent promotion) should be documented and explained. Similarly, bonus and commission claims require evidence of the performance metrics and a track record of meeting or exceeding them — one-time windfalls are less persuasive than recurring performance-based pay.

For future earning capacity claims, you will need expert reports from: (1) a forensic economist who calculates the present value of future lost earnings based on your work-life expectancy, expected wage growth, inflation, and a discount rate; and (2) a vocational rehabilitation specialist who assesses which occupations you can and cannot perform post-injury, given your education, training, physical limitations, and the Kentucky labor market. These experts typically charge $5,000$15,000 for their analysis, but their testimony is essential for claims involving permanent impairment.

Courts in Kentucky will not award future earning capacity damages based solely on the plaintiff's testimony — expert support is required.

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Workers' Compensation vs. Personal Injury Claims in Kentucky

If you were injured on the job in Kentucky, you may have two potential paths to recover lost wages: workers' compensation and a third-party personal injury claim. Workers' comp is no-fault and pays 66⅔% of your average weekly wage; a third-party tort claim requires proving fault but can recover 100% of all lost income.

The two systems operate under fundamentally different rules, have different deadlines, and both may run simultaneously.

Workers' compensation in Kentucky provides no-fault benefits — if you are injured on the job, you receive TTD at 66⅔% of your average weekly wage (subject to a statutory maximum) regardless of who caused the injury. You do not have to prove negligence.

The tradeoff is that workers' comp is the exclusive remedy against your employer under Ky. Rev.

Stat. § 342.001 et seq..

You cannot sue your employer in tort for the remaining 33⅓% of your lost wages. However, if a third party caused the injury (e.g., a negligent driver hit your work vehicle, a defective tool malfunctioned), you can pursue a separate tort claim against that third party for full lost wages.

The key differences between the two paths in Kentucky: (1) Workers' comp pays a percentage (66⅔%) of your average weekly wage; a tort claim can recover 100% of all lost income including overtime, bonuses, and benefits. (2) Workers' comp requires no proof of fault; a tort claim requires proving the defendant's negligence.

(3) Workers' comp provides faster payment (often within 2–4 weeks of the injury report); a tort claim can take months or years to resolve. (4) Workers' comp does not award future earning capacity, pain and suffering, or other non-economic damages; a tort claim can.

(5) Workers' comp has its own filing deadline under Ky. Rev.

Stat. § 342.001 et seq.; the tort claim follows the 1 year statute of limitations (Ky.

Rev. Stat.

Ann. §§ 413.140(1)(a), 413.140(1)(e), 413.090).

When a third-party tort claim exists alongside a workers' comp claim, Kentucky law generally gives the workers' comp insurer a right of subrogation — meaning the insurer can recover the TTD benefits it paid from your tort settlement. This prevents double recovery but requires careful coordination between your workers' comp claim and your tort claim.

Your attorney should negotiate the subrogation lien to maximize your net recovery. In some Kentucky cases, the subrogation lien can be reduced by the attorney fees and costs incurred in pursuing the tort claim.

Forensic accountant calculating lost earnings in Kentucky
Lost Wages Calculator resources — Kentucky

Kentucky Filing Deadlines and Tolling Provisions

Kentucky has one of the shortest personal injury filing deadlines in the nation — just 1 year (Ky. Rev.

Stat. Ann.

§§ 413.140(1)(a), 413.140(1)(e), 413.090). This means you have very little time to investigate liability, document lost wages, retain experts, and file suit.

Many claimants in Kentucky are surprised by how quickly this deadline arrives, especially when they are focused on medical treatment rather than legal strategy. The combination of a short deadline and the complexity of lost wages documentation makes consulting an attorney within days of the injury essential in Kentucky.

Waiting even a few months can jeopardize your ability to file a complete and well-supported claim.

Kentucky recognizes several tolling provisions that can pause the statute of limitations in specific circumstances. The most common include: (1) the plaintiff is a minor at the time of injury — the clock generally does not start until the minor turns 18; (2) the plaintiff is mentally incapacitated and unable to manage their own legal affairs; (3) the defendant has left Kentucky or is otherwise unavailable for service of process; and (4) the defendant actively concealed the wrongdoing through fraud.

Military service may also toll the deadline under the federal Servicemembers Civil Relief Act. These tolling provisions are technical and fact-specific — if you believe one may apply, consult a Kentucky attorney to confirm before relying on it.

Workers' compensation claims follow separate deadlines under Ky. Rev.

Stat. § 342.001 et seq..

You must generally report a workplace injury to your employer within 30 days (though some states allow slightly longer) and file a formal workers' comp claim within the statutory deadline (typically 1–2 years, depending on the type of injury and the state). Employment-related claims add another layer of deadlines: federal Title VII and ADA claims require filing an EEOC charge within 180–300 days of the discriminatory act, while state-law employment claims follow Kentucky's general limitations periods for the applicable cause of action.

Because of these overlapping and sometimes inconsistent deadlines, consulting an attorney promptly is the single best way to preserve all of your lost wages recovery options in Kentucky.

Special Situations: Self-Employment, Tips, and Multiple Jobs in Kentucky

Several common situations create unique lost wages calculation challenges in Kentucky: self-employment and gig work, tipped wage income, and holding multiple jobs at the time of injury. Each scenario requires different documentation and valuation methods under Kentucky law.

Self-employed and gig workers: If you are self-employed, an independent contractor, or a gig worker in Kentucky, your lost wages calculation is more complex than for W-2 employees. Courts calculate self-employment lost income by averaging 2–3 years of tax returns (Schedule C, 1099 forms) to establish a baseline.

Irregular income, seasonal fluctuations, and business growth trajectories all factor into the analysis. You should also include lost profits attributable to your absence — if your business lost revenue because you were unable to work, that lost profit is recoverable as economic damages.

The key is documentation: detailed profit-and-loss statements, client contracts, and bank records that corroborate your tax returns.

Wrongful termination claims: If you were wrongfully terminated in Kentucky, your lost wages include not only the salary and benefits you lost between termination and the resolution of your claim, but also front pay — the projected future lost wages if reinstatement is not feasible. The duty to mitigate requires you to make reasonable efforts to find comparable employment after termination.

Your lost wages will be reduced by any interim earnings from new employment, but Kentucky courts will not penalize you for failing to accept a demotion or a job substantially inferior to your former position. Kentucky's state income tax applies to wrongful termination recoveries, which should be factored into settlement demands.

Tipped employees: For tipped workers in Kentucky, lost wages include both the base wage and historical tip income. The calculation uses your average total compensation over a representative period (typically 6–12 months).

Tips must be documented through employer records, tax returns showing reported tip income, and credit card tip records. Kentucky has its own minimum wage of $7.25/hr, but the lost wages calculation is based on your actual total compensation, not the minimum.

Courts will draw adverse inferences against employers who fail to maintain tip records as required by law.

Multiple jobs and side income: If you held more than one job at the time of injury, you can claim lost wages from all positions — not just the job where the injury occurred. Document each position separately with pay stubs and employer verification.

For side income (freelance work, rental income from active management, coaching or tutoring), the key is showing that the income was regular and would have continued but for the injury. Sporadic or speculative future income is less likely to be awarded.

Cross-reference: use our statute of limitations tool for Kentucky to verify your filing deadline, and our divorce cost estimator if lost wages are relevant to a pending family law matter.

When to Consult a Kentucky Lost Wages Attorney

You should consult a Kentucky attorney if your lost wages exceed a few thousand dollars, if the at-fault party or their insurer disputes liability or the extent of your injuries, if your employer or their workers' comp insurer is pushing back on a claim, or if you have been wrongfully terminated. Most personal injury attorneys in Kentucky work on contingency — they charge no upfront fee and take a percentage (typically 33–40%) of the recovery only if you win.

This makes the initial consultation essentially risk-free and aligns the attorney's incentives with yours.

An attorney can significantly increase the value of your lost wages claim by identifying categories of lost income you may have overlooked (benefits, bonuses, future earning capacity, household services), retaining forensic economists and vocational experts whose testimony supports larger awards, negotiating with insurance adjusters who are professionally trained to minimize payouts, handling the subrogation lien from your workers' comp insurer to preserve your net recovery, and ensuring all filing deadlines are met — including the 1 year statute of limitations (Ky. Rev.

Stat. Ann.

§§ 413.140(1)(a), 413.140(1)(e), 413.090) and any shorter workers' comp or employment law deadlines.

The Kentucky State Bar Association maintains a lawyer referral service to connect you with qualified personal injury and employment attorneys in your area. When selecting an attorney, ask about their experience with lost wages claims specifically — not just personal injury generally — and whether they have access to forensic economists and vocational experts.

Key statutory references for your Kentucky lost wages claim: Ky. Rev.

Stat. § 342.001 et seq.

(workers' comp); Ky. Rev.

Stat. § 413.140(1)(a) (PI statute of limitations); Ky.

Rev. Stat.

§ 337.275 (minimum wage).

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Legal information, not legal advice. The Lost Wages Calculator for Kentucky produces estimates based on public fee schedules and state statutes. Actual costs vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed Kentucky attorney.