In North Carolina, you must prove what you normally earned, what work you missed, and that your injury caused the loss. Strong proof includes employer payroll and timekeeping records, a supervisor or HR wage verification, medical notes restricting you from work, and pay-related tax forms or bank statements. If pay is irregular, use a longer earnings history, tax returns, invoices, and platform or bank data to show an average.
In North Carolina, an injured person wants to recover lost wages from the at‑fault party’s insurer or, if needed, in court. The question is: what concrete proof do you need to show you missed work and lost income because of the injury? One key fact here is that your pay shows inconsistent withdrawals rather than regular wages, which means you’ll need a broader paper trail to demonstrate earnings reliably.
Under North Carolina law, damages for lost wages require competent evidence of your pre‑injury earnings, the work you missed, and a medical link between the injury and your time away. Courts and insurers expect reliable business records or sworn statements to avoid speculation. The main forum is civil court if settlement fails, and the Rules of Evidence govern what records can be used and how to authenticate them. Many injury claims have filing deadlines measured in years from the injury date, so building this record early matters.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because your pay shows inconsistent withdrawals, gather a longer lookback of earnings (for example, 12–24 months) using bank statements, platform reports, and tax returns to establish an average baseline. Your attorney’s pre‑demand medical summary, paired with doctor’s work restrictions, helps connect treatment dates to specific days you could not work. An employer or HR wage verification can list your role, pay structure, and dates/hours missed; if an accountant cannot verify, payroll/timekeeping data plus bank deposits and invoices can fill the gap.
To prove lost wages in North Carolina, show your pre‑injury earnings, document the work you missed, and link the time off to the injury with medical restrictions. Use employer payroll and timekeeping records, HR wage verification, medical notes, and—if income fluctuates—tax returns, platform reports, and bank deposits to establish a reliable average. Next step: gather these records now and have your employer provide a signed wage verification; deadlines apply and can be short.
If you're dealing with documenting lost wages after an injury, 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.