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Chicago HVAC Technician Injury Lawyers

HVAC technicians in Chicago keep the city running through brutal winters along Lake Michigan and sweltering summers in neighborhoods like Bronzeville, Logan Square, and Pilsen. They work on rooftops above the Loop, in cramped mechanical rooms beneath Wrigley Field, and inside commercial buildings all along the I-90/94 corridor. That work comes with serious physical risks. HVAC technicians have one of the highest rates of injuries and illnesses of all occupations. When a Chicago HVAC technician gets hurt on the job, the law gives them real options. Briskman Briskman & Greenberg is a Chicago abogado de lesiones personales firm that has represented injured workers across the city and surrounding communities for decades. This page explains what Illinois law requires, what benefits are available, and how our firm can help you pursue every dollar you are owed.

Table of Contents

The Dangers HVAC Technicians Face on Chicago Job Sites

HVAC work in Chicago is physically demanding and routinely exposes technicians to hazards that can cause serious, lasting harm. Potential hazards include burns from electrical parts or chemicals and muscle strains or sprains from handling heavy equipment or machinery. Those are just two categories. The full list is longer and more serious.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the top injuries for HVAC contractors include sprains, strains, and tears, fractures, cuts, lacerations, punctures, amputations, and heat and chemical burns. Falls are a constant threat. Technicians working on rooftops above Michigan Avenue or on elevated platforms inside large commercial buildings face fall risks that can result in broken bones, spinal cord injuries, and traumatic brain injuries.

HVAC technicians often operate in confined spaces, like when they are installing ductwork. In addition to the challenge of working in these small spaces, there is an increased risk of carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide exposure if the space does not have adequate ventilation. These are not minor inconveniences. Carbon monoxide poisoning can be fatal, and the effects of oxygen deprivation can be permanent.

Appropriate safety equipment is necessary in handling refrigerants, which are hazardous. Halocarbons are heavier than air, and they will displace air and can cause asphyxiation in a confined space due to displacement of oxygen. Overexposure causes dizziness due to the lack of oxygen, which is a warning of the onset of asphyxiation. Electrical shock is another constant danger. HVAC professionals directly work with electricity, like when they are connecting HVAC systems to power sources.

Work-related injuries or disorders affecting muscles, tendons, nerves, cartilage, joints, or spinal discs are known as musculoskeletal disorders. Repetitive movements like the routine lifting of heavy objects, daily exposure to whole body vibration, routine overhead work, and completing repetitive, forceful tasks can lead to these disorders. For a Chicago HVAC technician working multiple service calls a day, these injuries build up over time and can become permanently disabling.

Illinois Workers’ Compensation Rights for Injured HVAC Technicians

The Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act (820 ILCS 305) is the primary law protecting injured HVAC technicians in Chicago. It covers every person working under a contract of hire in Illinois, and it applies regardless of fault. You do not need to prove your employer was negligent to receive benefits. You only need to show that your injury arose out of and in the course of your employment.

Under Section 8 of the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act (820 ILCS 305/8), your employer must pay for all necessary medical care. This includes first aid, surgery, hospital services, and any treatment reasonably required to cure or relieve the effects of your injury. The law also requires your employer to pay for physical, mental, and vocational rehabilitation, including maintenance costs and expenses related to that rehabilitation.

Wage replacement benefits are also available. If your injury keeps you from working, you are entitled to temporary total disability (TTD) benefits, which are calculated based on your average weekly wage. If you can work but only in a reduced capacity, temporary partial disability benefits may apply. Permanent injuries, including permanent partial or permanent total disability, carry additional compensation under the Act’s schedule of injuries.

The Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act covers all employees, including non-citizens and minors. If you are an HVAC technician working in Chicago under any employment arrangement, you are almost certainly covered. A workers’ compensation lawyer at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can review your specific situation and confirm your eligibility at no cost to you.

Filing deadlines matter. Under the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, you generally have three years from the date of your accident to file an application for compensation with the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission (IWCC), or two years from the date of your last compensation payment, whichever is later. Missing that window can bar your claim entirely. Do not wait.

Chemical Exposure and Occupational Illness Claims for HVAC Workers

Some of the most serious injuries HVAC technicians suffer are not from a single accident. They develop over months or years of chemical exposure. Illinois law accounts for this through the Illinois Workers’ Occupational Diseases Act (820 ILCS 310), which covers conditions caused or worsened by workplace exposures, even when no single incident can be identified as the cause.

Under Section 3 of the Illinois Workers’ Occupational Diseases Act (820 ILCS 310/3), when an employee sustains injury to health by reason of a disease contracted in the course of employment and proximately caused by the employer’s negligence, a right of action accrues to that employee. The Act further states that violations of any effective rule made under the Occupational Safety and Health Act, or any Illinois statute intended to protect employee health, constitute negligence by the employer.

For HVAC technicians, occupational illness claims often involve refrigerant exposure, carbon monoxide poisoning, and long-term respiratory conditions from working in poorly ventilated spaces. Halocarbons are still toxic, and since they are heavier than air, they will displace air and can cause asphyxiation in a confined space due to displacement of oxygen. Repeated exposure to these substances, even at lower concentrations, can cause lasting lung damage and neurological harm.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), established by the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, sets workplace safety standards that apply directly to HVAC employers. Employers must provide and ensure workers use appropriate protective gear, such as impervious clothing, gloves, splash-proof safety goggles, and face shields, to prevent repeated or prolonged skin contact with liquid refrigerant under 29 CFR 1915.152(a). When employers fail to meet these standards, that failure can support both a workers’ compensation claim and, in some cases, a separate civil action. If you work as a workers’ compensation lawyer client in the Berwyn or western Chicago area, our firm serves those communities as well.

When a Third Party Is Responsible for Your HVAC Injury

Workers’ compensation is not always the only legal option. When someone other than your employer causes or contributes to your injury, Illinois law allows you to file a third-party personal injury claim in addition to your workers’ compensation claim. This is important because workers’ compensation benefits do not cover pain and suffering, full lost wages, or other damages that a civil lawsuit can recover.

For HVAC technicians, third-party claims arise in several common situations. A property owner who fails to maintain a safe work environment, a general contractor who ignores safety protocols on a construction site near the Chicago Riverwalk or in the West Loop, or an equipment manufacturer whose defective product causes an injury can all be held liable outside the workers’ compensation system.

If you were injured by a defective HVAC unit, a faulty ladder, or a malfunctioning tool, a product liability claim against the manufacturer may be available under Illinois tort law. If a negligent property owner’s failure to disclose a hazard caused your fall or chemical exposure, a premises liability claim may apply. These claims are separate from your workers’ compensation case and run on their own legal track.

Private industry employers reported 101,400 nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses in Illinois in 2023, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported. Many of those injuries involved third-party negligence that went unaddressed because the injured worker did not know they had additional rights. Our firm investigates every possible avenue of recovery for our clients. A workers’ compensation lawyer at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg will identify all liable parties and pursue the maximum available compensation on your behalf.

Illinois law does allow your employer’s workers’ compensation insurer to assert a lien against any third-party recovery, but that does not eliminate the value of pursuing both claims. In many cases, the combined recovery from both a workers’ compensation claim and a third-party lawsuit far exceeds what workers’ compensation alone would provide.

What Compensation Can an Injured Chicago HVAC Technician Recover?

The compensation available to an injured HVAC technician in Illinois depends on the type and severity of the injury, the circumstances of the accident, and whether any third parties share liability. Workers’ compensation and personal injury claims each carry their own categories of damages, and understanding both is essential to getting a full recovery.

Under the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, injured HVAC technicians can recover payment for all necessary medical treatment, temporary total disability benefits while they cannot work, temporary partial disability benefits if they return to lighter duty, and permanent disability benefits if their injury causes lasting impairment. Section 8(c) of the Act also provides compensation for serious and permanent disfigurement to the hand, head, face, neck, arm, leg below the knee, or chest above the axillary line, up to 162 weeks of compensation at the applicable rate.

A third-party personal injury claim can recover damages that workers’ compensation does not cover. These include full lost wages (not just the partial replacement provided by workers’ comp), pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, and future medical expenses beyond what the workers’ compensation system provides. For catastrophic injuries like amputations, spinal cord damage, or traumatic brain injuries, these additional damages can be substantial.

If a work injury results in death, the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act provides death benefits to surviving dependents. A separate wrongful death claim under Illinois law may also be available against any negligent third party. Families of HVAC technicians killed on job sites in Chicago deserve full accountability, and our firm handles those cases with the same commitment we bring to every injury matter. A workers’ compensation lawyer at our firm handles cases across the state of Illinois, including downstate communities.

Do not accept a settlement offer from any insurance company before speaking with an attorney. Insurers routinely offer far less than an injured worker’s claim is worth. Our firm evaluates the full value of your case, including future medical needs and long-term wage loss, before advising you on any settlement. We also serve clients in the northern suburbs through our workers’ compensation lawyer office in Des Plaines.

How Briskman Briskman & Greenberg Helps Injured Chicago HVAC Technicians

Briskman Briskman & Greenberg has spent decades representing injured workers throughout the Chicago area, from the high-rise buildings of the Near North Side to the industrial corridors of the South Side and the suburbs beyond. We know the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission process, the Cook County court system, and the tactics insurance companies use to undervalue or deny legitimate claims.

We handle every aspect of your case. That means gathering medical records, securing expert opinions on the cause and extent of your injury, documenting your lost wages, and dealing with insurance adjusters so you do not have to. If your employer retaliates against you for filing a workers’ compensation claim, that is a separate violation of Illinois law, and we address it directly.

Our firm works on a contingency fee basis for personal injury and workers’ compensation cases. You pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. You will not be billed for our time while your case is pending. This arrangement means every client, regardless of financial situation, has access to experienced legal representation from day one.

If you were injured on the job as an HVAC technician anywhere in the Chicago metropolitan area, including Cook, DuPage, Lake, Will, or Kane County, contact Briskman Briskman & Greenberg today. Call us at (312) 222-0010 for a free consultation. We will review your situation, explain your rights under Illinois law, and tell you exactly what your options are. There is no obligation, and no cost, to speak with us.

This content was prepared by Briskman Briskman & Greenberg, 351 W. Hubbard St., Suite 810, Chicago, IL 60654. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes in future cases. This page is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship.

FAQs About Chicago HVAC Technician Injury Lawyers

Do I have to prove my employer was negligent to get workers’ compensation in Illinois?

No. Illinois workers’ compensation is a no-fault system under the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act (820 ILCS 305). You do not need to prove your employer did anything wrong. You only need to show that your injury happened while you were working and that it arose out of your employment. This applies to HVAC technicians injured by falls, electrical shock, chemical exposure, or any other work-related cause.

What if my employer says my injury was my own fault?

It does not matter under Illinois workers’ compensation law. The system does not consider employee fault when determining eligibility for benefits. Your employer cannot use your own actions as a defense to deny your workers’ compensation claim. If your employer or their insurer is wrongfully denying your claim on this basis, contact Briskman Briskman & Greenberg at (312) 222-0010 to discuss your options.

Can I sue a property owner if I was injured at a job site I did not own?

Yes, in many cases. If a property owner’s negligence contributed to your injury, such as failing to warn you of a known hazard or maintaining an unsafe work environment, you may have a third-party personal injury claim against that owner. This is separate from your workers’ compensation claim and can recover damages that workers’ comp does not cover, including pain and suffering and full lost wages.

How long do I have to file a workers’ compensation claim in Illinois?

Under the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Act, you generally have three years from the date of your accident to file an application for compensation with the Illinois Workers’ Compensation Commission, or two years from the date of your last compensation payment, whichever is later. For occupational illnesses under the Illinois Workers’ Occupational Diseases Act (820 ILCS 310), different time limits may apply based on your last date of exposure. Missing either deadline can permanently bar your claim, so act quickly.

What if my HVAC injury was caused by a defective tool or piece of equipment?

If a defective product caused or contributed to your injury, you may have a product liability claim against the manufacturer, distributor, or retailer of that product. This is a third-party claim that runs alongside your workers’ compensation case. Product liability claims can recover compensation for pain and suffering, full lost wages, and other damages not available through workers’ comp alone. An attorney at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can investigate the cause of your injury and identify every party that may be responsible.

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Necesitaba un abogado de lesiones personales y Gavin y su equipo fueron más allá.


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Briskman Briskman & Greenberg Personal Injury & Car Accident Lawyers (BBG) is a legal team you want on your side.


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Estoy muy satisfecha con la representación de BB&G.

Robert Briskman manejó mi caso de lesiones muy bien. Personalidad divertida y comprensiva y se tomó el tiempo para explicar todo en detalle de todo el caso. Fue maravilloso trabajar con él. Yo recomendaría BB&G a cualquiera y para mí de nuevo en el futuro.

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Desde el momento en que me puse en contacto con este bufete me trataron como de la familia. 

Gavin Pearlman fue honesto y sincero conmigo durante todo el proceso. Sin sorpresas y nunca me mantuvo colgado. Recomiendo encarecidamente estos abogados para sus necesidades.

- Ron Gaber

I cannot say enough good things about the attorneys at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg Personal Injury & Car Accident Lawyers.


Fueron extremadamente receptivos, profesionales y compasivos durante todo el proceso. Sus habilidades de negociación fueron excepcionales, y fueron capaces de asegurar un acuerdo que superó con creces mis expectativas. Estoy agradecido de haber tenido un equipo tan dedicado".


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Chicago lawyer, Paul A. Greenberg is a top-rated by Super Lawyers
Personal Injury Super Lawyers Rising Star
Top-rated lawyers at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg Personal Injury & Car Accident Lawyers are members of the Illinois State Bar Association
Top-rated lawyers at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg Personal Injury & Car Accident Lawyers are members of the Workers' Compensation Lawyers Association

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