What Are the Most Common Causes of a Neck Injury at Work in Florida?
January 15, 2026 –

Neck pain that starts during or after work can be easy to ignore at first. Maybe it feels like a pulled muscle or tension from stress. But when it lingers, spreads into your shoulders, or makes it hard to turn your head, it may be more than soreness. It could be a neck injury caused by your job.
If that pain started after lifting, reaching overhead, or sitting at a desk all day, you might wonder whether it’s connected to your work. And if you’ve already reported it, you may be running into problems with your employer’s insurance company, delayed medical care, or confusion about what benefits you can actually receive.
To make sense of what you’re dealing with, it helps to see how Florida workers’ compensation treats a neck injury at work and the work situations that most often cause them.
How Florida Workers’ Compensation Treats Neck Injuries
Under Florida law, an employer must provide workers’ compensation benefits when an employee suffers an accidental injury that arises out of and in the course and scope of employment, and the work accident is the major contributing cause of the condition. (Fla. Stat. § 440.09). In practical terms, Florida defines “major contributing cause” as the cause that is more than 50 percent responsible for the injury compared to all other causes combined.
Across the state, common causes of neck injuries in workers’ compensation claims include sudden workplace accidents, work-related vehicle crashes, repetitive motion injuries from lifting or awkward postures, aggravation of neck conditions that job tasks make worse, or long-term exposures that affect the cervical spine.
Sudden Workplace Accidents and Neck Trauma
Many neck injuries start with a single event. Falls from ladders or platforms, slips or trips on wet floors or cluttered walkways, and being struck by falling tools, boxes, or building materials can all whip the head backward and forward or compress the neck and upper back.
Vehicle accidents are another frequent source of neck injury at work. Delivery drivers, sales staff, home health workers, and other employees injured on the job while driving company vehicles or personal cars for work errands may suffer whiplash, disc injuries, or nerve damage in a crash that occurs while driving for the job.
These sudden injuries can cause sprains, strains, or disc problems in the neck. Some injured employees feel sharp pain right away and go straight to the emergency room, while others notice stiffness, headaches, or numbness in the arms later.
If you suffer injuries in a sudden work accident, Florida workers’ compensation insurance should cover authorized medical bills and part of your lost wages as long as the injury arises out of work and you report it on time. Florida workers’ compensation law requires you to report the injury to your employer within 30 days of the accident or the first sign that the condition is work related. (Fla. Stat. § 440.185).
Repetitive Motion, Desk Work, and Neck Strain
Not all neck injuries come from one obvious incident. Many workers’ comp injuries develop slowly through repetitive motion or long periods in the same position. Over time, small strains on the cervical spine can build into a serious neck injury at work.
Repetitive motion injuries often involve regular lifting and carrying in warehouses or on construction sites, overhead work during maintenance or electrical jobs, frequent twisting to one side to access equipment or assist patients, or long hours of driving on Florida highways for work.
Office workers and remote employees also suffer injuries caused by poor ergonomics, such as screens at the wrong height, chairs without support, phone cradling, or repeatedly looking down at mobile devices.
Florida workers’ compensation cases that involve repetitive trauma or exposure often require proof that work activity is the major contributing cause of the neck condition, supported by clear and convincing medical evidence. That standard can apply whether the neck problem is a new injury or a worsening of arthritis, degenerative disc disease, or another preexisting condition.
What Florida Workers’ Compensation Provides for Neck Injuries
When you pursue a workers’ comp claim for a neck injury at work, Florida law provides several types of workers’ compensation benefits if the claim is accepted:
- Medical care with an authorized treating physician, including diagnostic tests, therapy, injections, and surgery when medically necessary
- Payment of authorized medical bills related to the work injury
- Partial wage replacement based on your average weekly wage if you cannot work at all or can work light duty for reduced pay
- Impairment benefits if the neck injury leaves a permanent impairment after maximum improvement
- Death benefits for family members if a fatal workplace accident or complications from a work injury cause a worker’s death
Most employers in Florida must carry workers’ compensation insurance, and the employer’s insurance company assigns adjusters to review injury claims, schedule medical treatment, and decide whether to accept or deny a workers’ comp claim.
In some workers’ compensation cases, a third-party claim may also exist. For example, if a negligent driver causes a crash while you drive for deliveries, you may have both a workers’ comp claim and a liability injury claim against that driver’s insurance company.
Steps to Take After a Neck Injury at Work in Florida
Neck pain can make it harder to focus on legal rights, but early steps after a work injury can influence how Florida workers’ compensation claims move forward:
- Report the neck injury in writing to a supervisor as soon as possible, and keep a copy.
- Ask for contact information for the workers’ compensation insurance carrier and claim number.
- Seek medical treatment promptly, whether through the emergency room for severe pain or through the provider your employer or insurer authorizes.
- Follow medical restrictions, keep follow up appointments, and save copies of work notes, imaging reports, and bills.
If you feel that the claims process is not moving forward, that your claim approved status is unclear, or that benefits have stopped without explanation, consider speaking with a Fort Lauderdale workers’ compensation attorney who handles neck-related workers’ compensation injuries in Florida.
Talk With Lyle B. Masnikoff and Associates About a Neck Injury Claim
The Florida workers’ compensation lawyers at Lyle B. Masnikoff and Associates represent injured workers in Florida workers’ compensation cases involving neck, back, and other work-related injuries. We handle Florida workers’ compensation claims for employees injured on construction sites, in warehouses, in health care, in offices, and in vehicle accidents tied to job duties.
When you contact our law firm, our legal team can review how your neck injury happened, which benefits may be available under workers’ compensation law, and whether a third-party claim might exist in addition to workers’ comp.
Our founding and senior attorney Lyle B. Masnikoff has spent more than 25 years standing up for injured workers across Florida, from Fort Myers to West Palm Beach. Our team knows how big insurance companies operate under Florida workers’ compensation law and how to protect your rights within the system.
Call (561) 598-7120(561) 598-7120 or visit our website to schedule your free case evaluation. Our Fort Lauderdale workers’ comp lawyers are ready to review your claim and pursue the benefits available under Florida law.
At Lyle B. Masnikoff & Associates, we will go the extra mile for you!
Copyright © 2026. Lyle B. Masnikoff & Associates, P.A. All rights reserved.
The information in this blog post (“post”) is provided for general informational purposes only and may not reflect the current law in your jurisdiction. No information in this post should be construed as legal advice from the individual author or the law firm, nor is it intended to be a substitute for legal counsel on any subject matter. No reader of this post should act or refrain from acting based on any information included in or accessible through this post without seeking the appropriate legal or other professional advice on the particular facts and circumstances at issue from a lawyer licensed in the recipient’s state, country, or other appropriate licensing jurisdiction.
Lyle B. Masnikoff & Associates, P.A.
1645 Palm Beach Lakes Blvd #550
West Palm Beach, FL 33401
(561) 598-7120(561) 598-7120
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Lyle B. Masnikoff & Associates, P.A.
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Orlando, FL 32819
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Lyle B. Masnikoff & Associates, P.A.
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Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
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Lyle B. Masnikoff & Associates, P.A.
543 NW Lake Whitney Place, Suite 106
Port St. Lucie, FL 34986
(772) 461-9181
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