In North Carolina, do not accept the first offer without a full review. Confirm all coverages (including UM/UIM), calculate your total damages, identify and negotiate liens, and prepare a documented counteroffer. Before signing any release, protect underinsured motorist rights by notifying your UIM insurer and securing its written consent or advance; calendar the filing deadline so you can sue if talks stall.
You received an opening settlement offer after a crash and are discussing negotiation strategy with your attorney. You’ve already talked about how attorney fees and medical liens affect your take-home amount and agreed on a minimum number. The key question now is: what concrete steps, in North Carolina, should you take before you accept, reject, or counter that initial offer?
Under North Carolina law, settlement decisions turn on accurately valuing your claim, protecting insurance rights (especially UM/UIM), and handling medical liens before you sign a release. The typical forum is informal negotiation with the liability insurer; if a lawsuit is filed, it proceeds in the county’s Superior Court and will be ordered to mediation. One critical trigger is notifying any UIM carrier and obtaining written consent or an advance before accepting the liability settlement. A second is the statute of limitations to file suit, generally three years for personal injury.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You and your attorney already set a minimum number and discussed fees and liens. Next, confirm all coverages (including any UIM) and notify the UIM carrier before agreeing to any liability settlement so you don’t waive UIM benefits. At the same time, obtain lien statements from providers/health plans and apply the lien limits so your counteroffer and closing statement reflect accurate net recovery. With documentation in hand, send a structured counter; if talks stall, preserve your rights by filing suit before the deadline.
After an initial offer in North Carolina, build leverage by documenting damages, protecting UM/UIM rights, and resolving liens before you sign a release. Notify any UIM insurer and obtain written consent or an advance, apply the medical lien cap after attorney fees, and counter with evidence. If negotiations stall, file your lawsuit in Superior Court before the deadline. Next step: send a written counteroffer and UIM notice, and calendar the civil filing cutoff.
If you're weighing an initial insurance offer and need to protect your lien and UIM rights while negotiating a stronger settlement, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.