In North Carolina, having Medicaid usually helps you get treatment while your pedestrian injury claim is pending, but it can also create a Medicaid repayment claim (often called a Medicaid lien) against part of any settlement or judgment. North Carolina law sets presumptions that often cap what Medicaid can recover to a portion of the gross recovery, and it gives you a way to ask a court to reduce Medicaid’s share in some cases. The key is to identify the Medicaid claim early and handle notice and repayment correctly when the case resolves.
If you were hit as a pedestrian in North Carolina and Medicaid paid for your emergency room care, imaging, or physical therapy, you may be asking: “Can I still pursue a claim against the driver, and will I have to pay Medicaid back out of my settlement?”
North Carolina treats Medicaid as a payer that can seek reimbursement when a third party (like an at-fault driver or their insurer) is legally responsible for the injury. The State has subrogation rights, meaning it can step into the injured person’s shoes to recover Medicaid payments tied to the injury from the third-party recovery. Practically, that means a portion of a settlement or judgment may need to be set aside and paid to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services (the “Department”) to satisfy the Medicaid claim.
North Carolina also uses statutory presumptions to determine how much of a gross recovery is treated as compensation for the Medicaid-paid medical care. If you disagree with the presumed amount, the law provides a court process (with strict timing) to ask for a different allocation.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, Medicaid (public health insurance) appears to have covered at least some of the emergency room evaluation, imaging, and follow-up care after the pedestrian crash. If the driver (or the driver’s insurer) pays money to resolve the claim, North Carolina law generally requires that the Medicaid claim be addressed from the recovery, using the statutory presumptions unless they are timely challenged. Because the injuries are described as ongoing and limiting, it is especially important to confirm which charges are crash-related and which payments Medicaid actually made, since repayment is tied to those payments.
In North Carolina, Medicaid does not prevent a pedestrian from bringing an injury claim, but it can require repayment from part of any settlement or judgment for Medicaid-paid, injury-related medical care. North Carolina law applies presumptions that often limit Medicaid’s share to a portion of the gross recovery, and it allows a court challenge if you act quickly. The most important next step is to identify the Medicaid claim and, if you plan to dispute the presumed amount, file the court application within 30 days after the settlement agreement is executed.
If you're dealing with a pedestrian injury claim where Medicaid paid for some of your treatment, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand how repayment works, what deadlines apply, and how to protect your recovery while the claim is resolved. Reach out today. Call [CONTACT NUMBER].
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.