OWCP Schedule Award

The Lump-Sum Payment for Permanent Impairment

When a federal work injury leaves you with permanent damage to a covered body part, FECA pays a lump-sum schedule award on top of medical care and wage-loss compensation. The amount depends on the body part, your impairment rating under the AMA Guides 6th Edition, and your pay rate at injury.

What Is a Schedule Award?

A Schedule Award is a one-time, tax-free payment for permanent impairment of a covered body part — arm, leg, hand, foot, eye, hearing, and others. It's paid in addition to medical care and any wage-loss compensation you've received. The award becomes available after you reach maximum medical improvement (MMI): the point where your physician determines that further treatment will not meaningfully change your level of impairment.

How OWCP Calculates Your Award

  1. Your treating or evaluating physician determines you've reached MMI and assigns a percentage impairment using the AMA Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, 6th Edition.
  2. The percentage applies to a fixed number of weeks for your specific body part (see the table below).
  3. You're paid 66 ⅔% of your weekly pay rate (or 75% with eligible dependents) for that number of weeks.

Example calculation

You're a USPS letter carrier who suffered a shoulder injury and received a 15% impairment rating to your right arm. Arm = 312 weeks. 15% of 312 = 46.8 weeks. At a $1,200 weekly pay rate, your compensation rate is $800 per week (66 ⅔%). Schedule Award ≈ 46.8 × $800 = $37,440 lump sum, tax-free.

Schedule Award Body-Part Weeks

These are the maximum weeks of compensation per body part — multiplied by your impairment percentage and your weekly compensation rate to calculate the award.

Body PartMaximum Weeks
Arm (per arm)312
Leg (per leg)288
Hand (per hand)244
Foot (per foot)205
Eye (per eye)160
Thumb (per thumb)75
First finger (index)46
Great toe38
Second finger (middle)30
Third finger (ring)25
Fourth finger (small)15
Other toes (each)16
Hearing (one ear)52
Hearing (both ears)200

Source: 5 U.S.C. § 8107. Back, neck, and certain internal-organ impairments are not on the schedule and are addressed differently by FECA.

What the Schedule Does NOT Cover

Some impairments aren't on the FECA schedule. The most common omissions:

  • Spine / back:permanent back impairments are not on the schedule. They're addressed through ongoing medical care + wage-loss compensation.
  • Internal organs (heart, lungs, kidneys) are addressed outside the schedule.
  • Mental health conditions (PTSD, depression from work injury) are typically compensated as continuing wage-loss, not via schedule award.

Common Schedule Award Mistakes

  • Filing for a Schedule Award before reaching MMI — OWCP will deny or defer.
  • Accepting a low impairment rating without an independent second opinion.
  • Letting the rating physician use an outdated edition of the AMA Guides. OWCP requires the 6th Edition.
  • Forgetting to file CA-7 along with the impairment evaluation report.

How We Help

We coordinate the impairment evaluation, refer to specialists when a condition-specific rating is needed, and write reports in the AMA Guides 6th Edition framework OWCP requires. Schedule a free consultation to find out whether you're at MMI and what a fair Schedule Award rating looks like for your case.