In North Carolina, compare your likely net recovery (after attorney’s fees and medical liens) to your risk-adjusted trial value and the time it will take to resolve the case. Provider liens attach to personal injury recoveries and must be resolved, and the statute of limitations generally gives you up to three years from the accident to file suit. If the insurer’s “final” offer is below your medical expenses, filing suit can preserve your rights and often leads to court-ordered mediation where higher offers sometimes emerge.
You’re the injured person in North Carolina deciding whether to accept an insurer’s low “final” settlement or proceed toward a lawsuit. Your medical bills are higher than the offer. You want to know if you should take the money now or hold out, considering your deadline to sue and what happens with your medical balances.
North Carolina law frames this decision around five things: liability (including the state’s contributory negligence rule), provable damages, insurance coverage/collectability, statutory medical liens and reimbursements that reduce your take-home amount, and the filing deadline. Lawsuits are filed in the Superior Court for the county where the accident occurred or where the defendant lives. A court case will include mediation, which adds settlement pressure but also takes more time.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Your medical expenses exceed the insurer’s final offer, so your net after fees and lien repayments may be minimal or negative if you accept now. Because you were advised of the lawsuit deadline, you can file to preserve claims and access court-ordered mediation, which may prompt movement. If liability is clean and damages are well-documented, holding out (through suit and mediation) often makes sense; if contributory negligence is a real risk, accepting a sure amount may be prudent despite the shortfall.
Decide by comparing your likely net recovery after attorney’s fees and statutory liens to the risk-adjusted value of going to court, all before the filing deadline. If the offer is below your medical expenses, consider filing a Complaint in Superior Court to preserve your rights and reach court-ordered mediation. Next step: ask your attorney to calculate your net and, if warranted, file suit before the three-year statute of limitations expires.
If you're weighing a low settlement against filing a lawsuit, 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.