Yes. In North Carolina, you can and usually should use your health insurance to pay hospital and rehabilitation bills after a crash. Medical providers and some insurers may claim repayment from any injury settlement, but provider liens are capped by law and paid in a set order. Extra costs like deductibles, copays, uncovered rehab, and lost wages are typically pursued from the at-fault driver’s liability insurance or your own auto coverages.
You want to know if your health insurance will pay your hospital and rehab bills after a car crash and, if so, what happens to amounts it doesn’t cover. This question sits squarely in North Carolina personal injury law and insurance claims. You have health insurance.
Under North Carolina law, you may submit crash-related treatment to your health insurer. If you later recover money from the at-fault driver, medical providers and some health plans can seek repayment from your settlement. North Carolina’s medical lien statutes limit how much providers can collect and set the order of payment. Most claims resolve with the at-fault driver’s insurer; if suit is needed, it is filed in civil court in the county where the crash occurred. Personal injury lawsuits generally must be filed within three years, and medical provider liens are limited to a percentage of the recovery after attorney’s fees.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you have health insurance, submit your hospital, inpatient, and month-long rehab bills to your plan. If you recover money from the at-fault driver, providers can assert liens, but the total of those liens cannot exceed 50% of your recovery after attorney’s fees. Your copays, deductibles, any uncovered rehab sessions, and lost wages are not waived; they are typically pursued as damages from the at-fault driver’s insurer and resolved when the claim settles.
In North Carolina, you can use your health insurance for crash-related hospital and rehab bills. If you recover from the at-fault driver, providers and some plans may seek repayment, but provider liens are capped at 50% of your recovery after attorney’s fees and must be paid in order. Extra costs like deductibles, copays, uncovered therapy, and lost wages are pursued from the at-fault insurer. Next step: submit your bills to your health insurer and open a liability claim, and calendar the three-year filing deadline.
If you're dealing with medical bills, insurance claims, and lien notices after a crash, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Reach out today. Call us at (919) 341-7055 or email intake@piercelaw.com.
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.