Workers’ Comp Stopped My Checks in Illinois: What to Do Next (Updated 2026 Guide)
what to do after a denied workers’ comp claim in Illinois.
What Do I Do If Workers’ Comp Stops Paying Me?
First: Don’t Assume You Did Something Wrong
In Illinois, if your doctor took you off work or gave you restrictions your employer can’t accommodate, you should be receiving TTD checks every two weeks.
When checks suddenly stop, it’s usually because the insurance company changed something on their end — not because you lost your rights.
Under the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, they cannot legally cut off benefits for no reason. But many still try. Perhaps the check is just late. Perhaps they’ve now decided to deny the case and fight. It’s confusing and stressful to deal with while also in pain from your injury.
Most Common Reasons Workers’ Comp Checks Stop
1. The insurance company thinks you’re “cleared” for work
This usually comes from an IME doctor — someone hired by the insurance company who may spend five minutes with you and write a report saying you can return to work. It doesn’t matter that your treating doctor disagrees; insurers often treat the IME as an excuse to stop paying.
2. They are disputing medical treatment
If they question whether your injury is work-related or whether your treatment is “reasonable,” they may stop checks to pressure you. This is extremely common after an MRI, surgery recommendation, or specialist referral.
3. They claim they are “waiting on paperwork”
Even something simple — a missing work status note or a late medical update — can trigger a pause. The problem is: they often don’t tell you.
4. They want to create financial pressure
Many injured workers live paycheck to paycheck. By stopping checks, insurers hope you go back to work early or give up fighting your case. This tactic is unethical but common.
If they are moving toward denial, these articles offer deeper insight:
Workers’ Comp Stopped Your Checks?
You may be entitled to penalties and emergency hearings. We can help.
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Call: (312) 739-0000
Can I get a loan if workers’ comp stopped my checks in Illinois?
Maybe—but you need to be very careful.
If workers’ comp stopped your checks in Illinois, you may start looking for a workers’ comp settlement loan or advance just to cover rent, groceries, and basic bills. That is understandable. When your income disappears but you still cannot work, the pressure builds fast.
In some emergency situations, a loan can help keep you afloat while your case is being fought. For example, if your checks stopped after an IME in an Illinois workers’ compensation case, or because the insurance company denied your treatment, a loan may buy you time while we fight to get benefits restarted, recover back pay, or force approval of the care you need. If surgery was denied too, also read workers’ comp denied my surgery in Illinois: what to do next.
But these loans come with real risk. They often carry very high interest and fees, and if you are not careful, they can eat up a large portion of your final settlement. In other words, they may solve a short-term cash emergency while creating a long-term settlement problem.
We cannot legally or ethically loan you money ourselves. But in the right case, we can help you evaluate whether funding makes sense, explain the risks, and connect you with a company if truly necessary. My view is simple: a workers’ comp loan is usually an emergency option, not a routine option.
If you want a full breakdown, read can I get a loan on my workers’ compensation case in Illinois?
How to Fix the Problem and Get Your Workers’ Comp Checks Restarted
Step 1: Contact the adjuster — briefly
Ask why payments stopped and whether they need updated medical records or a new work note.
Sometimes this alone solves the issue — but if they dodge you or refuse to clarify, that’s a sign something bigger is happening.
Step 2: Check your most recent medical visit
The insurance company cannot pay you unless they have a current work status note saying:
- Off work, or
- Restricted work your employer can’t accommodate
A missing note is the #1 simple reason checks stop.
Step 3: If the Insurance Company Won’t Fix It, the Fight May Need to Start
If the insurance company refuses to restart your TTD checks after you provide updated work restrictions, off-work notes, or medical proof from your treating doctor, the next step may be filing a Section 19(b) Petition for Immediate Hearing.
A 19(b) petition is one of the fastest tools available in an Illinois workers’ compensation case. It can put the dispute in front of an Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission arbitrator and force the insurance company to defend why it stopped paying you.
This is often where the case changes. Up to this point, the adjuster may be treating the stopped checks like a paperwork issue or relying on an IME report that says you can return to full duty. But once a 19(b) petition is filed, the dispute becomes a real hearing issue: your lawyer must be ready to prove that your injury is work-related, your restrictions are valid, the employer cannot accommodate them, and TTD benefits should be paid.
A 19(b) hearing may ask the arbitrator to:
- restart your weekly TTD checks;
- award back pay for missed checks;
- decide whether your current condition is related to the work injury;
- reject the insurance company’s IME position in favor of your doctor;
- order payment of disputed medical bills; and
- address denied treatment or surgery if that issue is also part of the dispute.
Many insurance companies take a case more seriously once they see that the worker’s lawyer is prepared to try it. The goal is not always to have a full hearing. Sometimes filing and preparing the 19(b) petition creates pressure to restart benefits or resolve the dispute. But if the insurance company will not do the right thing, your lawyer needs to be ready to present the evidence to the arbitrator.
For a full explanation of what happens when a disputed workers’ comp case goes to hearing, read our Illinois workers’ comp hearing and trial guide.
Bottom line: if your checks stopped and the insurance company will not fix it voluntarily, a 19(b) petition may be how the fight starts. It tells the insurer that you are not just waiting — you are moving the case toward a hearing.
Step 4: Seek penalties for improper nonpayment
If workers’ comp stopped your checks without a lawful reason, the Arbitrator can order:
- Penalty payments
- Attorney fees
- Back pay for all missed checks
Learn more about how a lawyer helps injured workers:
- Benefits of Hiring a Workers’ Comp Lawyer
- How Much a Workers’ Comp Lawyer Costs
- Switching Lawyers in Workers’ Comp
2026 Update: Recent Cases Where We Fought Stopped or Denied TTD Checks
When workers’ comp stops TTD checks, the pressure on an injured worker can be immediate. Rent, mortgage payments, groceries, medical appointments, transportation, and family expenses do not stop just because the insurance company decided to rely on an IME or deny part of the case.
Recent McHargue & Jones cases show how important TTD disputes can be.
In a Rockford workers’ comp appeal win, a temp staffing worker was taken off work after a serious icy parking lot fall. The arbitrator initially awarded only a small period of TTD and denied the right shoulder injury and surgery. We appealed. The Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission reversed the key parts of the decision and awarded TTD from February 6, 2024 through June 13, 2025. That was not just a technical legal win. It meant the worker recovered a major period of unpaid weekly benefits while her medical care remained disputed.
In a FedEx package-handler case, TTD was also a major issue. The case involved disputed causation, foot and ankle treatment, prospective surgery, and whether the worker could return to package-handling work. After we won the 19(b) trial, the case later resolved based on permanent restrictions, future medical needs, and loss of occupation.
TTD and wage benefits also mattered in the UPS feeder driver repetitive-trauma trial win, where the injured worker won benefits after the employer disputed causation and prospective treatment for bilateral carpal tunnel, left cubital tunnel, and trigger finger.
These cases show why stopped checks should not be ignored. The insurance company may say you are at MMI, that the IME released you to full duty, that the injury is no longer work-related, or that light duty is available. But your treating doctor’s restrictions, the actual job duties, the employer’s ability to accommodate, the medical records, and the timing of the cutoff all matter.
If your checks were stopped because surgery was denied, read Workers’ Comp Denied My Surgery in Illinois: What to Do Next. If you want to understand how TTD is calculated and how it fits with other benefits, read How Much Does Workers’ Comp Pay in Illinois? and Types of Workers’ Compensation Benefits in Illinois.
Get Your Workers’ Comp Checks Restarted
We file emergency hearings and pursue penalties when insurers break the law.
FAQ: When Workers’ Comp Stops Paying
Why did my workers’ comp checks stop?
Most commonly: IME disputes, missing paperwork, insurer strategy, or medical disagreements.
Can workers’ comp legally stop my checks?
Not without a lawful reason — and not without proper medical support.
What if the adjuster won’t call me back?
Document everything and speak to an attorney. Lack of communication is a red flag.
How fast can a lawyer restart my checks?
With a 19(b) emergency petition, many workers see payments resume within days or weeks.
Related Workers’ Compensation Problems in Illinois
These are some of the most common problems injured workers face after a claim is denied or benefits are cut off:
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- Workers’ comp denied my surgery in Illinois – what can I do next?
- Why did workers’ comp stop my checks in Illinois, and how do I restart them?
- What to do if your workers’ comp check is late or delayed in Illinois
- IME disputes in Illinois workers’ compensation cases – what injured workers should know
- Problems with light duty work in Illinois workers’ comp cases (restrictions, job offers, and disputes)
- Workers’ comp denied my surgery in Illinois – what can I do next?


