Websites for workers' comp attorneys — all 50 states
Workers' Compensation lawyer website design
The person landing on a workers' comp site is usually hurt, off the clock, and worried about two things at once: the injury and the paycheck. Many are searching from a phone in a break room or a doctor's waiting area, often after a claim was denied or an adjuster stopped returning calls. The site has to say, within five seconds, that you handle exactly this, that the consultation is free, and that calling will not cost them their job. Anything slower loses them to the next result.
What's actually at stake.
Comp practices live on volume, and volume is won or lost online. Individual cases are smaller than personal injury verdicts, but a steady intake pipeline of fee-bearing claims is what keeps a comp firm running, and the search market reflects that: injury and comp keywords are among the most expensive clicks in legal advertising, with settlement-mill competitors spending heavily. A site that loads slowly, buries the phone number, or reads like a generic injury page sends paid traffic straight back to Google. Because contingency and statutory fee structures cap what each case pays, wasted clicks hurt comp firms more than most — the economics only work when the site converts at a high rate.
Built for workers' comp attorneys
Five things your site gets that a generic build never will.
- 01
Injury-type and industry subpages
Dedicated pages for construction falls, warehouse and forklift injuries, repetitive stress, first responders, and the industries that dominate your local docket. These pages match how injured workers actually describe what happened.
- 02
Denied-claim landing path
A claim denial is the single most common trigger for hiring a comp lawyer, so we build a dedicated denied-claim page with its own intake flow rather than burying it in a general FAQ.
- 03
Click-to-call mobile layout
Most comp visitors arrive on a phone. The number stays fixed on screen, the free-consultation promise sits above the fold, and forms ask only what intake needs to call back.
- 04
Benefits and process explainers
Plain-language pages on what comp pays, how long claims take, and whether the worker can be fired for filing. These answer the fear questions that keep people from calling.
- 05
Spanish-language mirror pages
In most markets a meaningful share of injured workers search in Spanish. We build translated core pages and intake, not a machine-translation widget.
How workers' comp attorneys get found on Google.
Comp search is overwhelmingly local and problem-driven. People type "workers comp lawyer near me", "workers comp claim denied what do I do", "can I be fired for filing workers comp", and "how much does workers comp pay" — note how many of those are questions, not lawyer searches. The firms that rank pair a strong Google Business Profile with city-level service pages and a library of plain-English answers to benefits and denial questions. State-specific content matters because comp is state law; a generic national page rarely outranks a page written for your state's system.
Straight answers
Workers' Compensation attorneys ask us.
Do you understand the difference between comp and personal injury marketing?
Yes, and it changes the build. Comp visitors are searching about benefits, denials, and job security rather than verdicts, so the content plan centers on claim-process questions and the design pushes a fast free-consultation call rather than big settlement numbers.
How do you handle Spanish-speaking clients on the site?
We build real translated pages for the core practice content and the intake form, with hreflang tags so Google serves the right version. A translation widget alone does not rank in Spanish search and reads poorly to native speakers.
Can the site screen out cases we don't want?
Yes. Intake forms can ask the qualifying questions you give us — date of injury, whether a claim was filed, employer state — and route or flag submissions so your staff calls the strong cases first.
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