Yes. In North Carolina, medical payments ("Med Pay") coverage is a first-party benefit under your own auto policy and can be paid regardless of any ongoing subrogation negotiations by a health plan or others. You still must meet your policy’s requirements (covered accident, reasonable and necessary medical expenses, and proof of loss). Coordination matters: reimbursement or lien issues may affect later settlement distribution, but they do not block Med Pay processing now.
You want to know if you can use your North Carolina Med Pay benefits now even though a benefits administrator is pursuing subrogation related to your crash. The core question is: can you collect first-party Med Pay while another entity seeks repayment from any future settlement?
Under North Carolina law, Med Pay is optional first-party auto insurance that reimburses reasonable and necessary medical expenses from an auto crash, regardless of fault. It is separate from the at-fault driver’s liability insurance and from any health plan recovery. The claim is handled by your own insurer, not the court. Policy conditions control timing and proof requirements, and insurers must handle claims promptly and fairly under state insurance standards. Provider liens can attach to third-party settlements, and UM/UIM coverage is governed by statute and policy language.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you have Med Pay coverage, you can submit your accident-related medical bills to your own insurer now. If your treatment is complete and the bills are reasonable and necessary, your insurer can process payment upon receiving proof of loss. The health plan’s subrogation file targets any future third-party settlement, not your Med Pay claim. Coordination will matter at settlement to address any reimbursement or lien rights.
Yes—North Carolina Med Pay is a first-party benefit that can be paid while subrogation negotiations are pending. You must show a covered accident, reasonable and necessary medical expenses, and submit proof of loss under your policy. The practical next step is to file your Med Pay claim with your auto insurer now and coordinate documentation so later settlement funds account for any liens or reimbursement claims.
If you're dealing with Med Pay, subrogation, and potential UM/UIM issues from a North Carolina crash, 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.