Yes. In North Carolina, Medicare (CMS) must be repaid from a personal injury settlement, but you can often reduce what CMS claims. You can dispute unrelated charges, receive an automatic reduction for attorney’s fees and case costs, and request a waiver or compromise based on fairness or hardship. Do not pay until CMS issues a Final Demand; you typically have 60 days to pay it to avoid interest.
You’re a North Carolina injury claimant who received a Medicare letter about a lien, and it says “do not send payment at this time.” You want to know if you can negotiate what Medicare will take from your settlement. This question matters because CMS has a legal right to reimbursement, and insurers and attorneys usually won’t disburse settlement funds until the Medicare claim is resolved.
Under North Carolina law and federal Medicare rules, CMS has a priority reimbursement right from liability settlements when it paid “conditional” medical bills for your injury. State lien caps don’t limit Medicare’s recovery. The main forum is CMS’s Benefits Coordination & Recovery Center (BCRC) through the Medicare Secondary Payer Recovery Portal. After settlement, CMS issues a Final Demand; payment is generally due within 60 days, and you typically have about 120 days to appeal the amount. Procedures and timelines can change, so check current CMS instructions.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Your “do not send payment” letter is typically a conditional payment notice, not a bill. You can and should review CMS’s itemized charges and dispute any that are unrelated to the accident. When CMS issues the Final Demand, it will apply a reduction for your attorney’s fees and costs. If the demand still seems too high or would cause hardship, you can ask CMS for a further waiver or compromise.
Yes—you can negotiate the Medicare reimbursement tied to your North Carolina personal injury settlement by disputing unrelated charges, benefiting from the built‑in reduction for attorney’s fees/costs, and seeking a waiver or compromise when appropriate. Wait for CMS’s Final Demand, then act quickly: pay within 60 days to avoid interest, or file a timely challenge. Next step: share the letter with your attorney, report the claim through the CMS portal, and request corrections or reductions before payment.
If you're dealing with a personal injury settlement and a Medicare lien, 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.