NCCI Class Code 7705 Workers' Comp Rates by State | GBC

NCCI Class Code 7705 — Workers' Comp Filed Rates by State

NCCI class 7705 · filed rates

Ambulance Service Companies & Drivers — Workers' Comp filed loss costs

What state regulators have approved for class 7705, captured from public state-DOI rate filings across 7 state(s).

Workers' Comp premium for NCCI class code 7705 (Ambulance Service Companies & Drivers) is priced per $100 of payroll. The chart and table below show the filed loss costs state regulators have approved — the baseline before each carrier's loss-cost multiplier and your experience modifier. These 7 filings span 7 state(s).

Lowest filed
$1.94 / $100 payroll
IN — state-DOI filing
Highest filed
$5.35 / $100 payroll
MN — state-DOI filing
States tracked
7
distinct public filings captured
Filed loss cost per $100 payroll by state — class 7705
Filed loss cost per $100 payroll by state — class 7705MN$5.35WI$4.29MO$3.28AL$3.17CT$3.07OR$2.16IN$1.94
Source: Public state-DOI / SERFF rate filings
Filed loss cost by state — class 7705
StateCarrier / bureauFiled loss costEffectiveFiling ref
ALNational Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — AL filing$3.17 per $100 payroll (advisory loss cost)3/2026AL-NCCI-2026-03-7705
CTNational Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — CT filing$3.07 per $100 payroll (advisory loss cost)1/2026CT-NCCI-2026-01-7705
INIndiana Compensation Rating Bureau (ICRB)$1.94 per $100 payroll (advisory loss cost)1/2025IN-ICRB-2025-01-7705
MNMinnesota Workers' Compensation Insurers Association (MWCIA)$5.35 per $100 payroll (MWCIA pure premium loss cost)1/2026MWCIA-MN-2026-7705
MONational Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — MO filing$3.28 per $100 payroll (advisory loss cost)1/2026NCCI-134646477-MO-7705
ORNational Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — Oregon advisory pure premium (DCBS-approved)$2.16 per $100 payroll (advisory pure premium)1/2026OR-NCCI-2026-01-7705
WIWisconsin Compensation Rating Bureau (WCRB)$4.29 per $100 payroll (WI administered manual rate)10/2025WI-WCRB-2025-10-7705
Source: Public state-DOI / SERFF rate filings

Filed rates by state, explained

In Alabama, National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — AL filing filed a loss cost of $3.17 per $100 of payroll effective March 2026, on record as AL-NCCI-2026-03-7705. Alabama has a competitive private Workers' Comp market. In Connecticut, National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — CT filing filed a loss cost of $3.07 per $100 of payroll effective January 2026, on record as CT-NCCI-2026-01-7705. Connecticut has a competitive private Workers' Comp market. In Indiana, Indiana Compensation Rating Bureau (ICRB) filed a loss cost of $1.94 per $100 of payroll effective January 2025, on record as IN-ICRB-2025-01-7705. Indiana has a competitive private Workers' Comp market. In Minnesota, Minnesota Workers' Compensation Insurers Association (MWCIA) filed a loss cost of $5.35 per $100 of payroll effective January 2026, on record as MWCIA-MN-2026-7705. Minnesota has a competitive private market alongside a quasi-public state fund. In Missouri, National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — MO filing filed a loss cost of $3.28 per $100 of payroll effective January 2026, on record as NCCI-134646477-MO-7705. Missouri has a competitive private market alongside a quasi-public state fund. In Oregon, National Council on Compensation Insurance (NCCI) — Oregon advisory pure premium (DCBS-approved) filed a loss cost of $2.16 per $100 of payroll effective January 2026, on record as OR-NCCI-2026-01-7705. Oregon has a competitive private market alongside a quasi-public state fund. In Wisconsin, Wisconsin Compensation Rating Bureau (WCRB) filed a loss cost of $4.29 per $100 of payroll effective October 2025, on record as WI-WCRB-2025-10-7705. Wisconsin has a competitive private Workers' Comp market.

Across the 7 states we track, filed loss costs for class 7705 range from $1.94 in Indiana to $5.35 in Minnesota — about a 2.8× difference. That spread reflects each state's own injury experience and whether it adopts NCCI advisory loss costs or files through an independent rating bureau such as California's WCIRB, New York's NYCIRB, or Pennsylvania's PCRB.

Nationally, Workers' Compensation carriers ran a 45.1% loss ratio, a 12% underwriting profit, and a 13% return on net worth (NAIC 2023) — the line-level economics behind the filed loss costs above. A class's filed loss cost is the regulator-approved starting point; how profitable it is for carriers to write shapes the loss-cost multipliers you actually pay. These figures come from the NAIC Report on Profitability by Line by State.

How your Workers' Comp rate is set

Your NCCI class code classifies the work your employees do by injury risk — it's the single biggest driver of your Workers' Comp base rate. The filed loss cost above is the only public, regulator-approved piece; your actual premium is:

Filed loss cost × carrier LCM × experience modifier × (payroll ÷ $100)

Most states use NCCI's loss-cost guidance; independent-bureau states (e.g., California/WCIRB, New York/NYCIRB, Pennsylvania/PCRB) and monopolistic state funds (e.g., Ohio BWC) file their own — which is why the same class code carries different filed rates by state above.

Methodology

Each loss cost is drawn from a public state-DOI rate filing (via the state's SERFF portal) or a public NCCI State Advisory Forum summary, traceable by its filing reference. Loss costs are per $100 of payroll before the carrier's loss-cost multiplier; your actual rate depends on your carrier's LCM, experience modifier, and state. No proprietary NCCI manual data is reproduced — only figures states have published in public regulatory filings. See our full sourcing policy.

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