Why Traditional Workers' Comp Takes Days (and PEO Takes Hours)
When you apply for a traditional workers' comp policy, the carrier goes through an individual underwriting process. They review your industry, payroll, loss history, experience modification factor, and sometimes request loss runs from prior carriers. This process takes a minimum of 24–48 hours and often 3–5 business days — longer for high-risk industries.
A PEO works differently. Instead of underwriting your company individually, you join the PEO's existing master policy. The underwriting has already been done on the master policy level. Your enrollment is an administrative process, not an underwriting process — which is why it can be completed the same day.
Traditional Policy Timeline
- Day 1: Submit application
- Day 1–2: Carrier requests loss runs
- Day 2–3: Underwriting review
- Day 3–5: Quote issued
- Day 4–6: Bind coverage
- Day 5–7: COI issued
PEO (Comp Ninjas) Timeline
- Hour 1: Submit online form (2 min)
- Hour 1: Review your rate
- Hour 1–2: Sign PEO agreement
- Hour 2: Set up payroll
- Hour 2–3: Coverage bound
- Hour 2–3: COI issued same day
How to Get Your Same-Day COI: Step by Step
Submit Your Quote Request (2 Minutes)
Fill out our online form with your business name, industry, number of employees, and estimated payroll. No detailed loss runs or financial statements required for initial enrollment.
Review Your Rate
We calculate your rate based on your class code and payroll. You'll see the exact premium before committing. No surprises, no bait-and-switch pricing.
Sign the PEO Agreement
The co-employment agreement is signed electronically. This establishes the legal relationship that allows the PEO's master policy to cover your workers.
Set Up Payroll
Provide basic payroll information. The first payroll run can be set up same day for most businesses.
Receive Your COI
Once enrollment is complete, your Certificate of Insurance is issued immediately. You can download it, email it to your GC or client, or have us send it directly.
What's on a Workers' Comp Certificate of Insurance?
A workers' comp COI (ACORD 25 form) contains the following information:
| Field | Description |
|---|---|
| Certificate Holder | The name of the general contractor, property owner, or client requiring the COI. |
| Insured | Your business name and address. |
| Policy Number | The workers' comp policy number under the PEO's master policy. |
| Effective Date | The date coverage began — for same-day COIs, this is today's date. |
| Expiration Date | The policy expiration date, typically one year from the effective date. |
| Limits | Florida statutory limits: $100,000 per occurrence / $500,000 policy limit / $100,000 employer's liability. |
| Carrier Name | The name of the insurance company providing coverage under the PEO's master policy. |
| NCCI Code | The workers' comp class code(s) applicable to your operations. |
Industries That Get Same-Day COI Through Comp Ninjas
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I really get a workers' comp COI the same day I apply?
Yes, through a PEO. Traditional workers' comp policies require underwriting, which takes 1–5 business days minimum. PEO workers' comp uses group underwriting — your company joins an existing master policy rather than being individually underwritten. This allows same-day enrollment and same-day COI issuance in most cases.
What information do I need to get a same-day workers' comp COI?
Basic business information: legal business name, FEIN (Federal Employer Identification Number), business address, industry type, number of employees, and estimated annual payroll. You do not need loss runs, financial statements, or prior insurance history for initial PEO enrollment.
Who can I name as certificate holder on my workers' comp COI?
Any party that requires proof of your workers' comp coverage — typically your general contractor, property owner, municipality, or client. You can name multiple certificate holders on a single policy. Additional insured status is not typically available on workers' comp policies (unlike general liability), but the certificate holder can be any entity.
What if my general contractor requires a specific carrier or minimum rating?
Most GCs require an A-rated carrier. PEO workers' comp is typically written through A-rated carriers. If your GC has specific carrier requirements, let us know when you apply and we'll confirm the carrier meets their requirements before enrollment.
Can I get a same-day COI if I've been declined for workers' comp before?
Yes. PEO workers' comp is specifically designed for hard-to-place accounts. Prior declines, high EMod, new business status, or high-risk industry classification do not automatically disqualify you from PEO enrollment. Same-day COI issuance is available even for accounts that have been declined multiple times.
How long is a workers' comp COI valid?
A workers' comp COI is valid for the policy period — typically one year. As long as your PEO enrollment remains active and your premium payments are current, your coverage continues and your COI remains valid. You can request updated COIs at any time at no charge.