Filing a workers' compensation claim in Missouri means dealing with an insurance company whose job is to pay as little as possible. One of the first things that happens after you file is a call from the insurance adjuster asking for a recorded statement. It sounds routine. It isn't. A recorded statement is evidence — and an injured worker who gives one without legal assistance is taking a serious risk.
Before representing injured workers in central Missouri, Chris Miller served as a government attorney in the Missouri Department of Labor — the department that oversees the Division of Workers' Compensation — and administered the DWC. He knows how the agency operates, how claims move through the system, and where disputed cases tend to turn. This guide explains what a recorded statement is, how it fits into your claim, and how to protect yourself before you say a word.
What Is a Recorded Statement in a Workers' Comp Claim?
A recorded statement is a formal interview between the insurance adjuster and the injured worker. The adjuster asks questions about the accident, the injury, medical treatment received, and the claimant's prior medical history. The recording is transcribed and placed in the workers' compensation claim file, where it can be used as evidence at every stage — settlement negotiations, dispute proceedings, and formal hearings before an Administrative Law Judge.
The adjuster works for the employer's insurance company. Every word you provide will be used in determining how much — or how little — to pay. The recorded statement is one of the earliest pieces of evidence created in your case, and it is created before most claimants understand what is at stake.
You have the right to consult with a workers' compensation attorney before giving a recorded statement. At Bur Oak Injury Law, consultations are free. Call (573) 499-0200 before the adjuster's call — not after.
Why the Insurance Adjuster Wants Your Recorded Statement
The recorded statement serves several strategic purposes for the defense. Adjusters use it to lock in your account early, so that any later inconsistency — even a minor one caused by memory or nervousness — can be used to attack your credibility. They ask about prior medical conditions and any prior employment-related injury to find grounds to argue that your current diagnosis predates your work injury. They ask about your daily activities to minimize injury severity and challenge your disability rating.
They also listen for statements suggesting the accident occurred outside your scope of employment, off the clock, or due to horseplay — all grounds to deny your workers' compensation claim under Missouri law (Chapter 287 RSMo). In such cases, a single offhand comment can be decisive. The adjuster who seems friendly and sympathetic is still paid by the insurer whose interest is to protect the company, not the injured employee.
What Questions the Adjuster Will Ask
Questions in a workers' comp recorded statement cover four main areas: the accident itself (when, where, how, and who witnessed it); your injuries and current medical treatment (what body parts are hurt, what your doctor has prescribed, your recovery status); your prior medical history (any prior injury to the same body part, prior workers' compensation case, or prior diagnosis that could address the same condition); and your daily activities and wages (what you can and cannot do, whether you are working in any capacity).
The claimant's answers to these questions determine the extent of the insurer's exposure. Adjusters are trained interviewers. Every question has a purpose. Before you answer any of them, discuss your situation with an attorney familiar with Missouri workers' compensation law and the process an injured worker faces at every stage of the claim — from initial benefits through settlement.
How to Answer a Workers' Comp Recorded Statement
Answer only what is asked. Do not volunteer information. If you do not know the exact answer, say so — do not guess. Do not minimize your pain or limitations out of politeness. Be consistent with how you described the accident and your symptoms to your treating physician, because discrepancies between your statement and your medical records are a primary defense strategy. If you have suffered an occupational disease rather than a traumatic accident, this is especially important — the nature and onset of occupational disease claims are often disputed, and your early statements carry significant weight.
Do not accept the premise of a question you believe is inaccurate. If the adjuster asks "so you were able to return to your normal job duties," and that is not true, do not agree simply because the question was phrased as an assumption. Seek legal advice before the call, not after.
Do You Have to Give a Recorded Statement in Missouri?
Missouri law does not require injured workers to give a recorded statement before consulting an attorney. You have the right to speak with a workers' compensation attorney first. Requesting a delay to obtain legal advice is not the same as refusing to cooperate — and any insurer that treats it that way is applying pressure to get you on record before you understand your rights.
Outright refusal can give the insurer grounds to delay processing your claim, so the better approach is not to refuse — it is to exercise your right to obtain legal representation before participating. At Bur Oak Injury Law, consultations are free and there is no fee unless we win your workers' compensation case.
The Adjuster Is Going to Call. Be Ready.
Before private practice, Chris served as a government attorney in the Missouri Department of Labor — the department that oversees the Division of Workers' Compensation — and administered the DWC. He knows how the agency operates and how claims are evaluated. Free consultation, no fee unless we win.
Talk to Chris before you give a statement →What Happens to the Statement and How It Affects Your Claim
The recorded statement is transcribed and placed in your claim file. It can be used at any stage: settlement negotiations, dispute proceedings before the Missouri Division of Workers' Compensation, and formal hearings before an Administrative Law Judge. At maximum medical improvement — when your doctor determines you have recovered as fully as you are likely to recover — the insurer assigns a permanent disability rating. The statement you gave at the beginning of your claim may be used to argue that the injuries you suffered were less severe than your later diagnosis indicates.
Workers who were compensated less than they deserved, or who were not compensated at all, often point to an unprepared recorded statement as a turning point. The claimant who described their pain as manageable, who agreed they were "doing okay," or who failed to mention a key detail about how the accident occurred — those statements follow the case to the judge's review and to the settlement table. Contact Bur Oak Injury Law before the adjuster calls you.
Written Notice Requirements Under Missouri Workers' Comp Law
Separate from the recorded statement, Missouri workers' compensation law imposes a written notice requirement: a person injured at work must notify their employer within 30 days of the accident, or within 30 days of knowing the injury is work-related for gradual-onset conditions. Failure to meet this requirement can result in denial of your entire claim. This written notice is often the first formal step that triggers the insurer's process — including the request for a recorded statement.
Workers' compensation claims in Missouri do not go to a jury trial. Disputed claims are heard by an Administrative Law Judge, and the status of your case at every stage depends on the evidence in your file. If you cannot settle your claim informally, the judge reviews your recorded statement alongside your medical records and other evidence. Workers who understand this process — and who prepare accordingly — are far more likely to reach a result that fully compensates them for what they suffered.
Workers who seek legal assistance before speaking with the adjuster, and who take the time to obtain advice from an experienced attorney, are far better positioned to receive the full compensation they are owed. For more on how a claim progresses after the recorded statement, see our guide to filing a workers' comp claim in Missouri.