Yes. In North Carolina, workers’ compensation insurers have a lien on your third‑party settlement, but the lien can be reduced by agreement or by a Superior Court judge. Attorney’s fees and case costs come off the top before the lien is paid, and a judge can further reduce or even extinguish the lien when fairness requires it.
You want to know if you can reduce the workers’ comp lien before disbursing your personal injury settlement. In North Carolina, the injured worker (you) must address repayment of comp benefits paid by the employer/carrier when there is a third‑party recovery. Here, you already received workers’ comp benefits and are finalizing a settlement, so the immediate issue is whether, and how, the lien can be negotiated or reduced.
North Carolina law gives the employer/carrier a lien on your third‑party recovery for the workers’ compensation and medical benefits it paid. When you settle or win your personal injury case, the money is distributed by statute: costs and a reasonable attorney’s fee are paid first, then the lien, then any remainder to you. If there is disagreement about the lien, a Superior Court judge can decide the amount and may reduce it in the interest of fairness. The Superior Court is the forum for any lien‑reduction motion, and this should be resolved before settlement funds are disbursed.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You received workers’ comp benefits, so the insurer has a lien on your third‑party settlement. Your attorney can first deduct approved costs and a reasonable fee, then address the lien from the remaining funds. If negotiation does not yield a fair compromise, you can ask a Superior Court judge to reduce the lien before any money is disbursed.
Yes, you can negotiate a North Carolina workers’ comp lien in a personal injury case. By law, costs and a reasonable attorney’s fee are paid first, then the lien from the remaining funds. If the lien seems unfair in light of your settlement, a Superior Court judge can reduce or extinguish it. Next step: request an itemized lien ledger from the comp carrier and, if no agreement is reached, file a motion in Superior Court before any settlement money is disbursed.
If you're resolving a third‑party settlement and need to handle a workers’ comp lien, 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.