In North Carolina, Medical Payments (MedPay) is no-fault coverage that should be paid once you submit complete proof of loss (itemized bills, records, and any required forms) and the charges are reasonable and related to the crash. There is no fixed statewide deadline for MedPay payments, but insurers must handle claims promptly and in good faith. Many straightforward claims pay within a few weeks after all documentation is in. If payment stalls, request a written status, escalate to a supervisor, file a complaint with the North Carolina Department of Insurance, and consider a contract claim if needed.
You want to know how quickly your North Carolina insurer should pay a MedPay claim and what you can do if they delay. The role here is the insured seeking first-party MedPay benefits from their own auto insurer. The action is submitting a complete claim and getting paid for crash-related medical bills. The key trigger is when the insurer receives complete proof of loss; your ER visit and two months of chiropractic care are part of the claimed expenses.
Under North Carolina law, MedPay pays reasonable and necessary medical expenses caused by a motor vehicle crash, up to your policy limit, regardless of fault. Payment timing is driven by when the insurer receives complete proof of loss and whether the treatment is connected to the crash. Insurers must investigate and resolve claims promptly and fairly, but there is no single statute that sets a fixed number of days for MedPay payments. Disputes over nonpayment or delay are typically pursued as breach-of-contract claims in civil court, and insurance conduct rules also apply.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You have MedPay and sought ER and two months of chiropractic care after a rear-end collision. Once you submit itemized bills and any requested forms or authorizations, your insurer should review whether those charges are reasonable, necessary, and crash-related and then pay up to the policy limit. If you have already provided complete documentation and weeks have passed with no clear response, that points to a potential handling delay you can challenge.
In North Carolina, MedPay pays reasonable, crash‑related medical bills once you submit complete proof of loss, and insurers must handle these claims promptly and fairly. There is no fixed statewide payment deadline, but weeks‑long silence after you provide all documents is a red flag. Your next step is to send a written status request and escalate if needed; if the claim remains unpaid, file a complaint with the Department of Insurance and consider a contract action within three years.
If you’re dealing with a delayed MedPay claim or unclear requests for documentation, our firm has attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out 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.