Electrical Injury at Work Claims

Electrical Injury at Work Claims — No Win, No Fee

Electrical injuries at work can be devastating. An electric shock or arc flash can cause severe burns, cardiac arrest, neurological damage, and death — often in a fraction of a second. If you or a family member has been injured by electricity at work, your employer may have breached their duties under the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989.

NJS Law’s specialist team handles electrical injury claims across England and Wales on a No Win, No Fee basis.

This page is part of our Accident at Work Claims service.

If we do not win your case, you pay nothing.

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Electrical injuries can cause life-changing harm. NJS Law will fight for the full compensation you deserve.

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What Is an Electrical Injury at Work Claim?

An electrical injury at work claim is a legal claim for compensation made against your employer — or another responsible party — when you have been injured by electricity at work due to their negligence or failure to comply with health and safety law.

Electrical injuries in the workplace include:

  • Electric shock — the passage of electrical current through the body, causing muscle contractions, burns, cardiac arrhythmia, or cardiac arrest
  • Arc flash — an electrical explosion releasing intense heat, light, and pressure. Arc flash temperatures can exceed 19,000°C and cause severe full-thickness burns at distances of several metres
  • Electrical burns — both entry and exit wounds where current passes through the body, often more severe internally than they appear externally
  • Falls caused by electric shock — a shock while working at height can cause an involuntary fall, compounding the injury
  • Fire caused by electrical fault — burns, smoke inhalation, and other fire injuries where a workplace electrical fault caused a fire

What Law Protects You from Electrical Injuries at Work?

⚖️ Health and Safety at Work 
Act 1974 

The overarching duty on all employers to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety, and welfare of all employees — including protection from falls when working at any height.

⚡ Electricity at Work Regulations 1989

The primary legislation governing electrical safety at work. Requires all electrical systems to be constructed and maintained to prevent danger, all electrical work to be carried out in a way that prevents danger, and all persons who work on electrical systems to be competent to do so. Regulation 4 imposes a duty to ensure electrical systems are safe; Regulation 12 requires that live conductors be made dead before work begins unless it is unreasonable to do so.

🛠️ Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998 (PUWER)

PUWER 1998 requires machinery to be suitable for its intended use, properly maintained and inspected, fitted with effective guards and other safety measures, protected against specific hazards, and operated only by workers who have received adequate information, instruction, and training.

📋 Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999

Falls from height are the single biggest cause of fatal construction accidents. The Work at Height Regulations require employers and principal contractors to plan and supervise all work at height, use collective protective equipment (guardrails, safety nets), and provide fall arrest equipment (harnesses) where collective measures are insufficient. Scaffold must be designed, erected, and inspected by a competent person

What Are Your Employer's Duties Regarding Electrical Safety?

Under the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 and the broader health and safety framework, your employer must:

  • Ensure electrical systems are designed, constructed, and maintained to prevent danger — this includes fixed wiring, portable appliances, and temporary supplies
  • Implement a permit-to-work system for work on or near live electrical systems, ensuring proper isolation, locking off, and testing before work begins
  • Ensure only competent persons carry out electrical work — including holding relevant qualifications (such as City & Guilds 2391, JIB Gold Card, or equivalent)
  • Carry out regular inspection and testing — fixed installation testing (EICR) at defined intervals, and portable appliance testing (PAT) as appropriate to the risk
  • Provide suitable PPE — including insulating gloves, arc flash protection, and appropriate tools rated for the voltage involved
  • Train workers in electrical safety hazards and the safe systems of work applicable to their role

Common employer failures that give rise to electrical injury claims include: live working without proper permits, failure to isolate before maintenance, defective PAT-tested equipment still in service, inadequate training, and failure to provide arc flash PPE in switchgear environments.

How Much Compensation Can You Claim for an Electrical Injury at Work?

General Damages — Compensation for Your Injury

Electrical injuries frequently cause severe and permanent harm. Solicitors use the Judicial College Guidelines, 18th edition (April 2026)  to estimate the value of your injury. 

Injury Type

Severity

Approximate Range

Burns — minor (limited area, good recovery)

Minor

Up to £11,200

Burns — moderate (significant scarring, some psychological impact)

Moderate

£11,200 – £27,220

Burns — severe (significant body area, permanent scarring)

Severe

£55,700 – £136,430+

Burns — very severe (extensive, full thickness, life-altering)

Very Severe

£136,430+

Hand injury — loss of fingers

Serious

£17,580 – £98,670

Arm amputation (above elbow)

Severe

£109,650 – £130,930

Moderate brain injury (cognitive and physical effects)

Moderate

£90,720 – £150,110

Severe psychiatric injury / PTSD (permanent)

Severe

£59,860 – £100,670+

Cardiac injury (from electrocution — lasting effects)

Significant

£54,830 – £100,670+

Special Damages — Compensation for Your Financial Losses

In addition to general damages, you can recover: lost earnings (past and future), medical and rehabilitation costs, psychological treatment, home adaptations, care costs, and all other financial losses caused by the accident. See: General Damages vs Special Damages and Average Compensation Payouts.

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NJS Law has recovered over £6 million for injured workers in 2024–25 alone.

How Do You Make an Electrical Injury Claim? (Step by Step)

1. Seek Emergency Medical Attention

Electrical injuries may appear minor externally but cause severe internal damage. Always attend A&E. Ensure the treating doctor records both the injury and the cause — “electric shock at work” — in your medical notes.

2. Report the Accident

Report to your employer immediately and ensure the accident is recorded in the workplace accident book. Serious electrical injuries — including shocks causing unconsciousness, burns, or hospitalisation — must be reported to the HSE under RIDDOR 2013.

3. Preserve Evidence

Photograph the electrical system, equipment, or wiring involved. Do not allow the employer to repair, remove, or modify the equipment until it has been photographed and examined. Request any permit-to-work records, PAT test logs, and inspection certificates. Obtain witness details.

4. Collect Witness Details and Request CCTV

Note the names and contact details of all witnesses — workers, site managers, and any visitors present at the time. Request any CCTV or dashcam footage immediately. Note the exact time and location to assist your solicitor in identifying relevant footage.

5. Contact NJS Law for a Free Assessment

Our specialist employer liability team will assess your claim, explain your options, and — if we take on your case — issue a Letter of Claim to your employer’s insurer.

6. We Investigate, Negotiate, and Settle

We gather all documentation, commission an independent medical report, build your Schedule of Loss, and negotiate the maximum possible settlement with the defendant’s insurer. Around 95% of claims settle without a court hearing.

What Is the Time Limit for an Electrical Injury Claim?

Under the Limitation Act 1980, there are strict time limits for bringing a personal injury claim. Act within these limits — missing the deadline is the most common reason valid claims cannot be pursued.

Claim Type

Time Limit

Notes

Standard workplace accident

3 years from date of accident

The most common scenario

Industrial disease or occupational illness

3 years from date of diagnosis (or “date of knowledge”)

Applies where symptoms developed gradually over time

Child injured at work (or as a visitor)

3 years from their 18th birthday

A parent or guardian can bring a claim at any time before the child turns 18

Person lacking mental capacity

Time limit suspended during period of incapacity

A litigation friend manages the claim

Fatal workplace accident

3 years from date of death

Dependants may claim under the Fatal Accidents Act 1976

For a full explanation of all time limit exceptions and what to do if you are approaching your deadline, see our guide: Personal Injury Claim Time Limits in England and Wales.

For guidance on how long the claim process itself takes once you have started: How Long Does a Personal Injury Claim Take? 

Real Results — NJS Law Accident at Work Case Studies

Case highlight

£3.7m - A life rebuilt after a devastating workplace accident

Forklift accident · Spinal injury · Employer negligence

Our client arrived for work early one morning when his forklift truck struck a pothole hidden under murky water at the loading bay. The impact caused severe spinal injuries, leaving him unable to move. What followed was four years of rehabilitation, specialist hospitals, and legal complexity — with NJS Law by his side throughout.

“Nichola, my solicitor, took on two professional barristers who got my claim going. Without NJS Law, I wouldn’t have gotten this far. They helped me far beyond things I wouldn’t have known about.”

— NJS Law client, £3.7 million settlement

Settlement

£3,700,000

Injury type

Severe spinal injury

Cause

Hidden pothole — employer negligence

Duration

4-year case

Interim payments

Yes — housing, mobility, therapy

Outcome

Full independence restored

Nichola Johnson
Specialist Solicitor · Employer & Serious Injury · Qualified 2014

£17,000 Severe Leg Injuries — Faulty Workplace Equipment

Our client suffered serious leg injuries when faulty workplace equipment malfunctioned without warning, causing a heavy load to fall directly onto both legs.

The injuries included broken bones, severe ligament damage, an extended hospital stay, ongoing pain, and long-term mobility issues.

NJS Law successfully showed that the accident was caused by defective or poorly maintained equipment, and that the employer had failed to keep the workplace equipment safe and fit for purpose.

£9,500 Broken Leg — Workplace Obstruction and Pump Truck Accident

Our client suffered a broken leg after tripping over a wooden pallet that had been left in a cluttered and poorly maintained workspace while they were operating an electric pump truck.

As they tried to manoeuvre safely around colleagues, they fell backwards over the pallet, which had been left leaning against a pipe.

The pump truck then moved forward and trapped their leg.

NJS Law proved that the accident was caused by unsafe workplace conditions, poor housekeeping, and a failure to remove obvious hazards.

£33,000 Back Injury — Overseas Work Assignment

Our client was sent overseas for a work project and was repeatedly required to lift and carry heavy items without suitable lifting equipment, assistance, or adequate manual handling training.

The client suffered a serious back injury, required a four-day hospital stay, experienced long-term pain and mobility difficulties, and needed time off work to recover.

Although the accident happened abroad,

NJS Law successfully established that the UK-based employer had breached its duty of care.

£18,000 Arm Injury — Poorly Positioned Office Equipment

Our client suffered a serious arm injury while trying to clear a printer jam at work.

The printer had been positioned tightly against a wall, making it difficult to access safely.

When the client tried to move it into a safer position, they felt sudden pain and heard three sharp snaps in their arm.

The injury caused muscle and soft-tissue damage, required medical treatment and rehabilitation, led to time off work, and resulted in ongoing pain, weakness, and reduced mobility.

NJS Law proved that the employer had failed to provide a safe workplace setup, proper risk assessments, and safe procedures for dealing with equipment faults.

Ready to find out what your claim could be worth?

Our team is here to help.

No Win, No Fee Accident at Work Claims — Explained Clearly

All accident at work claims at NJS Law are handled under a Conditional Fee Agreement (CFA) — what most people call No Win, No Fee. Here is exactly what that means for you:

  • No upfront cost: You pay nothing to start your claim. There are no consultation fees, no retainer, and no disbursements charged upfront.
  • No cost if you lose: If your claim is unsuccessful, you pay nothing. The financial risk is ours, not yours.
  • A success fee if you win: If your claim succeeds, we deduct a success fee from your compensation. This percentage is agreed with you before you sign anything — you will never be surprised by it.
  • ATE insurance: We arrange After the Event (ATE) insurance to protect you against the defendant’s legal costs in the unlikely event that your claim fails after proceedings are issued.

You can read a full plain-English explanation of how No Win, No Fee agreements work at No Win No Fee Claims Page. 

Meet Your Accident at Work Legal Team

Our dedicated solicitors specialise in slip and trip claims and have decades of combined experience securing fair compensation. We understand how stressful an accident can be and provide clear, supportive guidance throughout the process.

Contact us today for a free consultation and move forward with confidence under our No Win No Fee promise. Taking early legal advice can strengthen your claim and protect your rights.

Leanne Henton

Solicitor / Litigation Manager

Angela Cross

Solicitor 

Laura Maniak

EL/PL Solicitor

Andrew Moores

EL/PL Litigation Executive

Curtis Lockston

EL/PL Litigation Executive

Joanne Scrivens

EL/PL Litigation Executive

Mark Sammans

EL/PL Litigation Executive

Sian Rickwood

EL/PL Litigation Executive

Nicole Parr

EL/PL Litigation Executive

NO WIN, NO FEE · SRA REGULATED · FREE ASSESSMENT

Injured at work? Find out if you have a claim in minutes.

680,000 workers were injured in the workplace in 2024–25. You may be entitled to compensation.

Why Choose NJS Law as Your Accident at Work Solicitors

Being injured at work can feel overwhelming, especially if you’re unsure of your rights or worried about your job. Our expert solicitors provide clear, honest advice and manage every aspect of your claim, so you can focus on recovery while we fight for justice.

🎓 200+ Years Combined Experience

Our specialist EL/PL team brings decades of expertise across workplace injury, employer liability, and serious injury claims.

⚖️ SRA Regulated

Authorised by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (no. 8006550).

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💰 Real Results — No Win, No Fee

£3.7M forklift settlement · £135,000 Manchester worker · £33,000 overseas injury · £18,000 arm injury. Real outcomes for real clients.

Electrical Injury at Work Claims – Frequently Asked Questions

Making an accident at work claim can feel overwhelming. Below we’ve answered the most common questions our clients ask. These cover eligibility, time limits, compensation, and what happens if your case goes to court.

Can I claim compensation for an electric shock at work?

Yes, if your employer failed to maintain safe electrical systems, allowed live working without proper permits, provided defective electrical equipment, or failed to ensure the person doing the electrical work was competent. The Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 place clear duties on employers that, when breached, form the basis of a compensation claim. NJS Law handles electrical injury claims on a No Win, No Fee basis.

An arc flash is an electrical explosion that releases intense heat, light, and pressure — typically when a fault causes electrical energy to discharge through the air between conductors. Arc flash can cause full-thickness burns, blindness, and blast injuries at distances of several metres. If your employer failed to carry out an arc flash risk assessment, provide appropriate PPE, or implement safe isolation procedures, a claim can be made under the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 and related legislation.

A claim can be made against your employer for failing to maintain or inspect the equipment under PUWER 1998. If the equipment was defective when it left the manufacturer, an additional claim may be available against the manufacturer or supplier under the Consumer Protection Act 1987. NJS Law will identify all responsible parties and pursue each appropriately.

Yes. Under Regulation 3 of the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989, the duty to ensure electrical systems are safe extends to anyone who has control of an electrical system — not just the owner. If the client’s electrical system was unsafe and you were required to work on or near it, a claim can be made against the client. The extent of your own employer’s duty to assess the risk before sending you to work on the site is also relevant.

It depends on the severity of your injuries. Minor electrical burn claims can settle in 9 to 18 months. Serious injuries — severe burns requiring multiple surgeries, cardiac complications, neurological damage, or traumatic psychological injury — take longer to assess and settle, typically 18 months to 3 years. NJS Law will not push you to settle before the full extent of your injuries and losses is properly established.

Accident at Work Insights and Guides

Our solicitors have written a library of plain-English guides to help you understand your rights. Read the articles most relevant to your situation:

Injured at work? Learn the key steps to take straight away to protect your health, evidence, and legal rights.

Find out how workplace injury compensation is calculated and what factors can affect the value of your claim.

Learn how No Win No Fee accident at work claims work and how you can start a claim without upfront legal fees.

A simple guide to the personal injury claims process, from starting your claim to reaching a settlement.

Understand your rights if you are worried about your job after making a workplace injury claim.

Learn what RIDDOR is, which workplace accidents must be reported, and how it may support your claim.

Find out your rights after a construction site accident and how to claim compensation for your injuries.

Learn how PUWER 1998 protects workers injured by unsafe machinery, tools, or workplace equipment.

Understand when you may be able to claim compensation after a fall from height at work.

Find out what affects the length of a personal injury claim and what to expect during the process.

Learn how PUWER 1998 protects workers injured by unsafe machinery, tools, or workplace equipment.

Learn how personal injury payouts are assessed and why compensation varies from case to case.

Understand the key time limits for making a personal injury claim in England and Wales.

Find out how partial fault can affect your personal injury claim and compensation amount.

Learn the difference between compensation for pain and suffering and compensation for financial losses.

Find out when interim payments may be available before your personal injury claim fully settles.

Ask NJS Law

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