In North Carolina, you receive your settlement check after your attorney deposits the insurer’s check into a trust account, the funds clear, and all valid medical and insurance liens are resolved and paid. Attorney’s fees come off the top, then medical liens are paid (capped at up to half of the remaining recovery), and the balance goes to you. Timing depends on how quickly lienholders issue final payoff letters and respond to reduction requests.
You want to know when money from your North Carolina personal injury settlement will be in your hands and what has to happen first. Here, the key players are you (the injured person) and your attorney, and the critical step is paying valid medical and insurance liens tied to your settlement. One fact that often matters: you prepaid an ambulance bill and want to be reimbursed.
Under North Carolina law, medical providers can assert liens against your personal injury settlement for reasonable charges related to your care. Your attorney must first deduct agreed fees and case expenses, then address valid liens. All medical provider liens together cannot take more than half of what remains after attorney’s fees. If lien claims exceed that cap, they share the limited amount proportionally. The distribution typically occurs from your attorney’s trust account, not a court. Some health plans and government payors have special statutory reimbursement rights that must be honored before funds are disbursed.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Your hospital system lien is a provider lien that, once itemized and verified, gets paid from the settlement after attorney’s fees and within the 50% cap. The “health insurer” claim depends on the plan: if it is a statutory or self-funded ERISA plan with enforceable rights, it must be resolved before distribution; if it lacks enforceable rights under North Carolina law, it can often be negotiated or denied. Your unpaid physical therapy bill, if not perfected as a lien, is typically handled from your net share. Your prepaid ambulance charge is not a lien; reimbursement to you usually comes from your net after valid liens are satisfied.
In North Carolina, you get your settlement funds after the insurer’s check clears in your attorney’s trust account, attorney’s fees are paid, and valid liens are resolved and paid within the statutory cap (no more than half of the post-fee recovery to provider liens, shared pro rata if needed). Next step: ensure your attorney secures final, itemized payoff letters from each provider or plan so disbursement can occur promptly.
If you’re navigating settlement disbursement and medical liens, our firm has attorneys who can help you understand your obligations and maximize your net recovery within North Carolina’s rules. Reach out 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.