Insurance for your business
- Auto repair shops
- Bars
- Carpenters
- Electricians
- Fast food
- Home-health agencies
- Painters
- Physician offices
- Restaurants
- Roofers
- Trucking companies
Learn
Compare two coverages
Workers’ comp insurance cost for bars in West Virginia
Published 2026-06-11 · by Brokly
- 46% of WV bars and taverns have <5 employees — the chart below prices every size band from its own observed payroll.
- West Virginia sits 51st of 51: NV pays more ($0.69).
- Workers’ comp is one of several coverages — see everything your bar needs in West Virginia →
What do West Virginia bars and taverns pay for workers’ comp?
Modeled annual premium across the real size distribution of WV bars and taverns
bar height = how many bars and taverns are that size · figures = modeled annual cost
Cohort: size distribution of 275 WV bars and taverns (Census CBP 2023); premiums modeled from one filed rate ($0.49/$100 payroll, 2024). Bands shown cover 275 of 275 establishments (100.0%). 2023 payroll dollars, not inflation-adjusted. Illustrative benchmark — not a quote or coverage recommendation.
Sources: Oregon DCBS workers' compensation premium rate ranking study, June 2025 (calendar-year 2024 rates) (as of calendar year 2024, retrieved 2026-06-04) · US Census County Business Patterns 2023, state file (Drinking places, alcoholic beverages (NAICS 722410)) (as of 2023, retrieved 2026-06-05)
How does West Virginia compare to nearby ranks?
Calculated manual rates, $ per $100 payroll, NCCI class 9084 (Bar, Lounge, Tavern), 2024. See all 51 jurisdictions →
| Rank | State | Rate / $100 payroll |
|---|---|---|
| 47 | North Dakota | $0.68 |
| 48 | Kentucky | $0.64 |
| 49 | Arkansas | $0.63 |
| 50 | Ohio | $0.52 |
| 51 | West Virginia | $0.49 |
Sources: Oregon DCBS workers' compensation premium rate ranking study, June 2025 (calendar-year 2024 rates) (as of calendar year 2024, retrieved 2026-06-04)
Frequently asked questions
What does workers' comp cost bars and taverns in West Virginia?
Modeled from the 2024 filed manual rate of $0.49 per $100 of payroll: a <5-employee bar lands around $91–$360 per year before experience mods and schedule credits.
What drives the rate up or down?
Three levers: payroll (the exposure base), claims history (the experience modifier), and schedule credits/debits the insurer applies. Bars and taverns fall under NCCI class 9084 (Bar, Lounge, Tavern) — establishments serving alcoholic beverages for on-premises consumption; restaurants (classes 9082 and 9083) are rated separately.
Bars in nearby-ranked states: Kentucky ($0.64) · Tennessee ($0.72) · Massachusetts ($0.81) · Texas ($0.81)
Stay informed
We’ll notify you when we’re ready to benchmark your bar’s coverage.
No spam — one email.
Illustrative benchmark — not a quote or coverage recommendation. Figures are modeled from public filings and Census data for 275 West Virginia bars and taverns; your premium depends on your payroll, claims history, and carrier.