If you were injured at work and your ESIC employment injury claim or your employer's compensation is stuck, you have a clear path: secure the accident report and your medical records, confirm whether you are covered by ESIC or by the Employees' Compensation route, push the ESIC grievance and labour escalation, and — because ESIC is a public authority — file an RTI to get your claim file and the exact reason for the delay. This guide walks through each step in plain language.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
An injury suffered in the course of your job is an “employment injury”. If you are covered under the Employees' State Insurance (ESI) scheme, the benefit comes through ESIC and not directly from your employer. First steps: get the accident recorded in the employer's accident register, collect all your medical records, and note your ESIC Insurance Number. The employer has a legal duty to report the accident to the ESIC branch. If the claim is delayed, send a written grievance to the ESIC branch and use the ESIC grievance portal, and complain to the labour department about the employer's failure. Because ESIC is a public authority under the RTI Act, you can file an RTI to obtain your claim file, confirm whether the accident report was filed, and learn the recorded reason for the delay. If your workplace is not covered by ESIC, the route is an Employees' Compensation claim against the employer or its insurer before the Employees' Compensation Commissioner.
This guide is for a worker who was injured, disabled, or made ill because of work, and who is now stuck because:
It is useful whether you are a factory or construction worker, a shop or establishment employee, a contract worker, or a security or housekeeping staff member, as long as the injury arose out of and in the course of your employment.
This guide does not cover routine medical insurance claims unconnected to a workplace injury, or ordinary illness that is not an employment injury. It also does not cover correcting wrong ESIC contribution records where there is no accident involved — for that, see our separate guide on correcting wrong ESIC employer contribution records. Where the disablement is severe, the amount at stake is large, or there is a death claim, treat this as a starting point only and consult a qualified labour lawyer, because how the claim is framed and which forum is chosen can affect the outcome.
Gather every piece of paper connected to the accident and the injury. Look for the accident register entry, any accident report copy, hospital and dispensary records, prescriptions, bills, the doctor's injury or disablement certificate, and your discharge summary. Find your ESIC card and write down your Insurance Number. Pull out a recent pay slip to check whether ESIC was being deducted. Write a short timeline: the date and time of the accident, what happened, who saw it, when you were treated, and what you were told about the claim. This timeline becomes the backbone of every letter you write.
Confirm which route applies to you. If your pay slip shows ESIC deductions and you have an Insurance Number, your employment injury claim runs through ESIC. If you were never covered by ESIC, your claim is an Employees' Compensation claim against the employer or its insurer. Then visit or call your ESIC branch office or dispensary and ask, in writing if possible, for the current status of your claim and whether the employer's accident report was received. Ask the employer's HR or supervisor for a copy of the accident register entry and the accident report submitted to ESIC. Do not accept a verbal “it is being processed” — ask for it on paper or by email so you have a dated record.
Organise everything into one folder, named and dated, with scans on your phone. Draft your first written grievance to the ESIC branch (use the template below) stating your Insurance Number, the accident date, the medical position, and the delay. Draft a short letter to the employer asking for the accident register entry and accident report acknowledgement. Prepare a draft RTI application to ESIC asking for your claim file and status. By Monday you will have three things ready to send: the ESIC grievance, the employer letter, and the RTI. Sending them close together creates steady pressure from more than one direction.
| Document / Evidence | Why you need it | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|
| Accident register entry / accident report acknowledgement | Proves the accident was recorded and reported; the single most important document for an employment injury claim | Employer's HR / safety officer; ask for it in writing |
| Medical records, prescriptions, bills, discharge summary | Establish the injury, the treatment, and the timeline | ESIC dispensary or hospital; treating hospital; your own records |
| Doctor's injury / disablement certificate | Confirms the nature and extent of disablement; drives the benefit type | ESIC medical officer or treating doctor |
| ESIC card and Insurance Number | Links the claim to your ESI record; needed on every form and letter | Your ESIC card; employer HR; ESIC branch |
| Pay slips showing ESIC deduction | Shows you were a covered insured person at the time of the accident | Your salary records; employer HR |
| Employment proof (appointment letter, ID card, attendance) | Establishes the employer-employee relationship and that the injury arose at work | Your own records; employer HR |
| Witness names and contact details | Supports your account of how the accident happened | Co-workers present at the time |
| Copy of every claim form and letter you submit | Creates a paper trail; starts the clock for grievance and escalation | Keep signed copies; use email or acknowledgement slips for timestamps |
This decides everything that follows. If ESIC was deducted from your wages and you have an Insurance Number, your employment injury benefit comes through ESIC. If your establishment was never covered by ESIC, your route is an Employees' Compensation claim, where the employer or its insurer is liable and disputes are decided by the Employees' Compensation Commissioner in the labour department. If you are unsure, ask the ESIC branch whether your establishment and you are registered. Get the answer in writing where you can.
The employer has a legal duty to enter a workplace accident in the accident register and to submit the prescribed accident report to the ESIC branch within the stated time. Ask HR or your supervisor for a copy of both. If the employer has not reported it, send a written request and keep the copy — the failure to report is itself a serious lapse you can complain about. As the injured worker, also report your injury to the ESIC dispensary or branch as soon as you can and keep proof. Early, documented reporting protects your claim.
Collect all medical records, the injury or disablement certificate, and your identity and employment proof. Submit the relevant ESIC claim form for the benefit you need — temporary disablement, permanent disablement, or dependants' benefit in a death case — along with the supporting documents. Keep a copy of the completed form and obtain an acknowledgement with a date. A complete, dated file is the fastest way to remove “documents pending” as an excuse for delay.
If the claim does not move, do not rely on phone calls. Write to the ESIC branch manager, quoting your Insurance Number, the accident date, the benefit claimed, the documents submitted, and the period of delay. Ask for a written status and a date for resolution. Lodge the same grievance on the ESIC public grievance portal so it carries a tracking number. Mention any hardship clearly — for example, lost wages during disablement and pending medical costs — because hardship can move a file up the queue.
If the branch does not respond, escalate in writing to the ESIC regional office, attaching your earlier grievance and its tracking number. In parallel, complain to the local labour department or the office of the Employees' Compensation Commissioner about the employer's conduct — particularly any failure to register you, deduct ESIC, or file the accident report. You can also raise the matter through CPGRAMS for central public-authority grievances, which can add pressure on ESIC as a central body.
Because ESIC is a public authority under the RTI Act, file an RTI application with the ESIC Public Information Officer. Ask for the status of your claim, a copy of your claim file, the date the employer's accident report was received (if at all), and the recorded reason for any delay or rejection. The reply often surfaces exactly what is missing or who is sitting on the file. See how to file an RTI online in India for the step-by-step process, and how to file a first appeal under Section 19 if ESIC does not respond in time.
| Level | Who / Where | How to reach | When to use | Expected outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Employer HR / safety officer | Written request for accident register entry and accident report acknowledgement | Immediately after the accident | Accident recorded and reported to ESIC; you get copies |
| 2 | ESIC branch office / dispensary | Submit claim form with documents; written grievance to branch manager | When the claim is submitted and again if it stalls | Claim registered; written status and resolution date |
| 3 | ESIC public grievance portal | pgportal.gov.in or the ESIC grievance link on esic.gov.in | If the branch does not respond in reasonable time | Tracking number; monitored escalation |
| 4 | ESIC regional office | Written escalation attaching earlier grievance and tracking number | If branch-level grievance is unresolved | Senior review; faster action on the file |
| 5 | Labour department / Employees' Compensation Commissioner | Written complaint about employer failure; or compensation claim if not ESIC-covered | When the employer fails to report/pay, or for non-ESIC workers | Action against employer; adjudication of compensation |
| 6 | RTI to ESIC PIO | rtionline.gov.in or written RTI to the ESIC PIO | Parallel to grievance; to get the claim file and delay reason | Discloses file status, accident-report date, recorded reason for delay |
| 7 | Employees' Insurance Court | Through a labour lawyer | If a benefit is wrongly denied or unreasonably delayed | Formal adjudication of the disputed claim |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending.
To, The Branch Manager, Employees' State Insurance Corporation (ESIC), [ESIC Branch Office name and address]
Subject: Delay in employment injury claim — Insurance No. [your ESIC Insurance Number] — request for status and resolution
Dear Sir / Madam,
I am an insured person under ESIC, Insurance No. [number], employed with [employer name] at [workplace address]. On [date of accident], I suffered an injury arising out of and in the course of my employment. The accident was [briefly describe what happened].
I was treated at [ESIC dispensary / hospital name] and my medical records and injury/disablement certificate are enclosed. I submitted my claim for [temporary disablement / permanent disablement / dependants'] benefit on [date of submission] and received acknowledgement reference [reference, if any].
Despite this, my claim has not been settled as of today, [date of this letter]. This delay is causing me hardship because: - [Example: I have lost wages during the period of disablement from [date].] - [Example: I have pending medical costs of approximately Rs. [amount].]
I request that you: 1. Confirm in writing the current status of my claim. 2. Confirm whether my employer's accident report was received, and on what date. 3. Specify any document still required, precisely and in writing. 4. Provide an expected date of resolution.
I am also lodging this grievance on the public grievance portal and reserve the right to file an RTI application and to approach the appropriate authority if the claim remains unresolved.
Yours faithfully, [Your full name] [Your mobile number and address] [Date]
Enclosures: 1. Copy of ESIC card / Insurance Number 2. Medical records, bills and injury/disablement certificate 3. Copy of claim form and acknowledgement 4. Pay slip showing ESIC deduction / employment proof
The Employees' State Insurance Corporation (ESIC) is a public authority under the RTI Act, 2005. This makes RTI one of the strongest tools in a delayed employment injury claim, because the records that decide the claim are held by a public body. You can file an RTI application with the ESIC Public Information Officer to:
The office of the Employees' Compensation Commissioner sits within the labour department, which is also a public authority. So for a non-ESIC worker pursuing an Employees' Compensation claim, an RTI to the labour department can ask about the status of a complaint against the employer or the progress of a compensation matter. Read how to file an RTI online for the process, and our wider first appeal and second appeal guide if you need to escalate a non-response. For deeper background on using the law, see The RTI Playbook.
Purely private employers and private insurers: RTI does not apply to a private company, a private contractor, or a private insurance company. You cannot file an RTI directly against your employer or against the employer's private insurer. For the employer's conduct, the route is the labour department, the Employees' Compensation Commissioner, or the ESI Court; for an insurer's handling of an Employees' Compensation policy, the route is the insurer's grievance process and the relevant insurance regulator or court.
RTI does not order payment: RTI gives you information, not a payment order. It will not by itself compel ESIC to release the benefit. But the information it produces — the claim file, the accident-report date, the recorded reason for delay — can be used in your ESIC grievance, before the labour authorities, or in the Employees' Insurance Court to get the claim moving.
For decisions, use the right forum: If a benefit is wrongly denied or the amount is disputed, that is decided by the Employees' Insurance Court or the Employees' Compensation Commissioner, not by an RTI reply. Use RTI to build your evidence, then take the dispute to the correct forum.
It is mainly the employer's duty. When an insured worker is injured in the course of employment, the employer is required to record the accident in the accident register and submit the prescribed accident report to the local ESIC branch office within the stated time. The injured worker should also report to the ESIC dispensary or branch as soon as possible and keep proof of doing so. If the employer fails to file the accident report, that failure itself is a ground for complaint and can be raised with the ESIC branch and the labour department.
ESIC benefits are for workers covered under the Employees' State Insurance scheme, where contributions are deducted and the worker has an Insurance Number. For a covered worker, employment injury benefits come through ESIC, not directly from the employer. The Employees' Compensation route applies to workers who are not covered by ESIC; there the employer or its insurer is liable to pay compensation, and disputes are decided by the Employees' Compensation Commissioner in the labour department. Check your pay slip and ESIC card to see which route applies to you.
Possibly. If your workplace was covered under ESIC and the employer failed to register you or deduct contributions, the employer's default does not automatically cancel your right to benefit. You should still report the injury, gather evidence that you were an employee, and raise the issue with the ESIC branch and the labour department. If the establishment was never covered by ESIC at all, then your route is an Employees' Compensation claim against the employer or its insurer before the Employees' Compensation Commissioner. The exact position depends on coverage facts, so confirm with the ESIC branch.
Yes. The Employees' State Insurance Corporation (ESIC) is a public authority under the RTI Act, 2005. You can file an RTI application with the ESIC Public Information Officer asking for the status of your claim, a copy of your claim file, whether the employer's accident report was received and on what date, and the reason recorded for any delay or rejection. This is one of the strongest RTI uses for an employment injury matter because the key records sit with a public body.
RTI gives you information; it does not by itself order payment. But the information is powerful. An RTI reply that shows your file is complete, or that the employer did file the accident report, removes the excuses commonly used to delay a claim. You can then use that reply in your ESIC grievance, before the labour authorities, or in the ESI Court. Many delayed claims move once the worker shows, in writing, exactly what the file contains.
Keep the accident register entry or accident report acknowledgement, all medical records and bills, the doctor's injury or disablement certificate, your ESIC Insurance Number and card, pay slips showing ESIC deductions, your employment proof such as the appointment letter or ID card, and any witness details. Also keep a copy of every letter or claim form you submit and every acknowledgement you receive. This evidence is essential for an ESIC claim, an Employees' Compensation claim, or an RTI application.
Start with a written grievance to the ESIC branch manager and the regional office, and use the ESIC public grievance portal. In parallel, complain to the local labour department or the office of the Employees' Compensation Commissioner about the employer's failure to report or to pay. File an RTI with ESIC for your claim file and status. If a benefit is wrongly denied or unreasonably delayed, the matter can be taken to the Employees' Insurance Court. For serious or high-value disablement and death cases, consult a labour lawyer.