In North Carolina, you can stack multiple sources to pay your child’s accident-related medical and chiropractic bills: your auto policy’s medical payments ("Med Pay") coverage, your health insurance, and the at-fault driver’s liability insurance. While the other insurer investigates, submit bills to Med Pay and health insurance. When liability is resolved, pursue the at-fault carrier for all reasonable, necessary, accident-related expenses and resolve any medical liens before final payment.
You want to know how, in North Carolina, a parent can get a minor child’s medical and chiropractic bills paid after a crash when the other driver’s insurer has not accepted fault yet. Here, your daughter was hit by a driver who rolled a stop sign, but police issued no citation. You need a path to pay bills now and protect the right to full reimbursement later.
North Carolina is a fault-based auto state. The at-fault driver’s liability insurance is ultimately responsible for reasonable, necessary medical expenses caused by the crash. While liability is pending, you can use Med Pay under your own auto policy (if purchased) and your health insurance to keep providers paid. Health care providers may assert statutory liens against any settlement or judgment, subject to caps and distribution rules that protect the injured person’s recovery. If the at-fault driver is uninsured or underinsured, your policy’s UM/UIM coverage may apply. The civil forum for unresolved claims is the county trial court where the crash occurred or where the defendant resides. Key timing includes your policy deadlines for Med Pay submissions and North Carolina’s statute of limitations for injury claims (minors have extra time), so act promptly.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because the at-fault insurer is still investigating, submit your daughter’s ER and chiropractic bills to your auto Med Pay (if you have it) and to your health insurance now to avoid collections. Keep treating as directed so the care is documented as reasonable and necessary. When liability is accepted, claim full reimbursement from the at-fault carrier and resolve any provider liens per North Carolina’s lien rules before disbursement.
In North Carolina, the at-fault driver’s liability insurance ultimately pays your child’s reasonable, necessary accident-related medical and chiropractic bills. While fault is pending, use your auto Med Pay (if you have it) and health insurance to prevent unpaid balances. Preserve claims by notifying insurers, keeping complete records, and timely submitting bills under your policy. Next step: open a Med Pay claim with your auto insurer and send itemized ER and chiropractic bills and records for prompt consideration.
If you're dealing with medical and chiropractic bills after your child’s crash while insurers point fingers, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today.
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.