There is no central North Carolina registry to check subrogation. You verify it by contacting each likely lienholder or recovery unit (medical providers, the client’s health plan, Medicaid, Medicare, or the State Health Plan) and asking if a recovery/subrogation file is open for the accident. Send a letter of representation with key identifiers and request written confirmation and a current lien ledger before disbursing any settlement funds.
In North Carolina personal injury cases, you need to know whether any insurer or provider has opened a subrogation or lien file tied to your client’s accident so you can resolve it before distributing settlement funds. Here, a billing administrator said no file was open and asked you to fax a letter of representation. The question is: how do you confirm file status with the right entities and document it?
North Carolina law recognizes statutory medical provider liens on personal injury recoveries and gives certain payors (like Medicaid and the State Health Plan) statutory recovery rights. These claims attach to settlement proceeds and must be addressed before distribution. Verification is done directly with the potential lienholder’s recovery/subrogation unit; courts are not the clearinghouse for these inquiries. A common threshold is that medical provider liens are subject to statutory limits and priorities, and government health benefit programs have separate rules and processes.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because the billing administrator reports no open file, your next step is to fax/email a letter of representation with the client’s identifiers and accident date and ask for written confirmation and a claim/lien ledger. Do the same for your client’s health plan and, if applicable, North Carolina Medicaid, Medicare, and the State Health Plan. Do not disburse settlement funds until you receive final written demands and apply the statutory limits and priorities to any provider liens.
In North Carolina, you verify subrogation by contacting each potential lienholder’s recovery unit, providing a letter of representation and client identifiers, and obtaining written confirmation and a lien ledger. Resolve statutory liens and recovery claims—applying North Carolina’s lien limits and priorities—before disbursing settlement funds. Next step: send your letter of representation to all likely lienholders and request written confirmation of file status and a current ledger before any settlement distribution.
If you're dealing with medical liens or insurer reimbursement after an accident, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at [919-341-7055].
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.