No two crashes, injuries, or claimants are alike. North Carolina law does not provide a fixed formula, but insurers, juries, and attorneys look at the same core factors: liability, damages, and collectability. Below is a step-by-step framework you can use to estimate a reasonable settlement for strains, sprains, and other soft-tissue injuries.
North Carolina is one of only a handful of states that still follows pure contributory negligence. If the insurance company can prove you were even 1% at fault, you may recover nothing. Gathering police reports, witness statements, dash-cam video, and crash-scene photos is critical before you ever discuss dollars.
Soft-tissue injuries often improve, but lingering pain, flare-ups, or the need for additional therapy can create future costs. Ask your treating provider for a written prognosis and anticipated expenses. Present-value those numbers using a reasonable discount rate.
North Carolina juries award what they consider fair compensation
for the human impact of an injury—pain, inconvenience, lost enjoyment of life. Common valuation approaches:
Neither approach is legally mandated. Use them as a starting point, then adjust for the considerations below.
Even a perfectly documented claim cannot exceed the policy’s bodily-injury limits. North Carolina requires only $30,000 per person / $60,000 per crash (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-279.21). Ask for a coverage disclosure early. If the limits are low and your damages exceed them, explore underinsured-motorist coverage (UIM) on your own policy.
Hospitals, health insurers, and Medicaid may assert reimbursement rights. North Carolina caps certain medical liens at N.C. Gen. Stat. § 44-50 (no more than 50% of the net settlement after attorney fees). Factor likely lien reductions into your bottom-line figure.
You have three years to file suit (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52). Trial expenses—deposition fees, expert testimony, exhibit preparation—reduce net recovery and add delay. Settlements provide certainty, but the willingness to file suit often increases offers.
Facts: Rear-end collision in Durham. Whiplash and lumbar strain. 16 weeks of physical therapy.
This figure is only an illustration—real cases rise or fall on evidence strength, venue, and individual circumstances.
Calculating a fair settlement involves more than simple math—you must know the law, document losses, and anticipate insurance defenses. Our North Carolina personal-injury team has years of experience negotiating and litigating soft-tissue claims. Let us maximize your recovery while you focus on healing. Call us today at 919-313-2737 for a free consultation.