Home | Compensation Amount | Make a Claim | Replacement Car | FAQ's | Contact
panorama
Making a claim

Work Injury is basically sustaining injuries while in working hours and on your workplace premises. Whether the injury was of you own fault, partially your fault or another staffs fault, you are still eligible to make claim against your workplace.

Why i'm allowed to claim when partailly or fully at fault?

The reason for this is because, you are the responsibility of the owner when you are working and it's there duty to ensure you are working in a healthy and safe environment by law, so such accident(s) do not occur

I will lose my job!

After having an accident at work, you may feel unsure about making a claim, because you fear that you may lose your job or be victimized by claiming against your employer. Your employer is insured in order to give out compensation to staff that are injured at work and it is very rare for staffs to be victimized for compensating against there employers nowadays. Also some employers welcome few work injury cases in order to improve there practice the next time around, so fewer injuries occur in future.

Make sure you:

Report the accident to the person above your level; coordinator, manager or the owner and it is recorded in a accident book, log or report. As this may be vital later on, when making a claim for the compensation amount asked for by yourself. or further advice please contact us.



Types of claims

bullet   Road Traffic Accident

bullet   Work Injury

bullet   Slip & Trip Accident

bullet   Whiplash


Replacements

bullet   Taxi, Private Hire,
Car, 9-Seaters,
Multi-Seater and Prestige



Our client's

bullet   Testimonials

About Us Privacy Policy Terms & Conditions Complaints Procedure News

Compensation claim, car accident claim, whiplash injury, work accident,
other personal injury claim, 100% compensation, no deduction, no win no fee.

Regulated by the Ministry of Justice in respect of regulated claims
management activities CRM 10030 and our registration is recorded on the website
www.claimsregulation.gov.uk.


Valid XHTML 1.0 Strict Valid CSS!