In North Carolina, the safest time to send a settlement demand is after you reach maximum medical improvement (MMI) or your provider formally discharges you. At that point, your records should reflect a stable diagnosis, completed treatment, and any future care your provider recommends. Stopping early or creating gaps in care can reduce the value of your claim. Keep the three-year lawsuit deadline in mind if negotiations stall.
The question is narrow: in North Carolina personal injury cases, when can you stop treatment and ask your lawyer to send a settlement demand without harming your claim? You are still seeing a chiropractor, so the decision point is whether to continue care or transition to settlement. The timing matters because insurers judge injury claims based on medical proof and consistency of care, and your goal is to maximize credibility and document all losses.
Under North Carolina law, settlement talks usually happen after your medical condition stabilizes. The practical benchmark is MMI (when you have recovered as much as expected) or a formal discharge from your provider. Claims are commonly negotiated with the at-fault party’s insurer; if settlement fails, a lawsuit is filed in the county’s state court (Clerk of Superior Court) within the applicable statute of limitations. Your file should include final bills, treatment records, and any provider recommendations for future care to support both past and future damages.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You are still in chiropractic care, so it is generally best to continue until your chiropractor discharges you or confirms you have reached MMI. Once discharged, your attorney can assemble final records, bills, and the provider’s prognosis, and include your completed wage form. If your provider recommends a referral or additional imaging, do not stop early—insurers view unfinished care as incomplete proof. Keep the three-year filing deadline in view while negotiating.
In North Carolina, the right time to stop treatment and pursue a settlement demand is when you reach MMI or receive a formal discharge, your treatment has been consistent, and you have final records, bills, and any future care recommendations. This timing supports causation and damages and reduces disputes. The next step is to ask your treating provider to confirm MMI or discharge and give your attorney the final documentation, while tracking the three-year deadline to file suit if needed.
If you’re deciding when to end treatment and send a settlement demand, our firm can help you time it right and prepare a strong demand package. Reach out today at (919) 341-7055 to discuss your options and timelines.
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.