Not always. In North Carolina, you can often resolve a personal injury case before your PTSD provider makes a final decision about more treatment, but doing so can make it harder to prove and value future care and long-term symptoms. The safer approach is usually to wait until your condition is more stable (or your provider can give a clear plan and prognosis), as long as you still protect the statute of limitations and any required notice deadlines.
If you are pursuing a North Carolina personal injury claim and you are still treating for PTSD, you may wonder whether you can (or must) settle now, especially when you have an upcoming appointment where your provider may reevaluate whether you need additional treatment. The key issue is whether settling before that decision could leave you responsible for future PTSD-related care that should have been included in the settlement.
North Carolina personal injury settlements are typically final. Once you sign a settlement release, you usually give up the right to seek more money later for the same incident, even if your PTSD symptoms worsen or your provider recommends additional treatment after the settlement. Because of that, the practical legal question is less about whether you are “allowed” to settle and more about whether you can reasonably document and support the value of your PTSD damages (including future treatment) before you resolve the claim.
Separately, you must protect the deadline to file suit. In many North Carolina personal injury cases, the statute of limitations is three years, and waiting too long can bar the claim even if you are still treating. Different deadlines can apply in special situations (for example, claims involving the State or medical malpractice), so timing should be confirmed early.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because you are still receiving PTSD treatment and your provider has an upcoming appointment to reevaluate whether you need additional care, settling before that reevaluation may lock you into a number that does not account for future therapy, medication management, or symptom flare-ups. If your provider can document a stable condition and give a clear prognosis (including whether more treatment is likely), you can usually value the claim more confidently. If the provider is still deciding what comes next, it is often harder to support future-care damages in a way that an insurer will take seriously.
You do not always have to wait for your PTSD provider to decide whether you need more treatment before resolving a North Carolina personal injury case, but settling early can make it harder to include future PTSD care and long-term symptoms in a fair resolution. Because settlements are usually final, you generally want either a stable treatment status or a provider-supported plan and prognosis before you sign a release. Next step: confirm your filing deadline and, if needed, file a complaint in the proper North Carolina court before the limitations period expires.
If you're dealing with a personal injury claim while still treating for PTSD, an attorney can help you line up the right medical documentation, evaluate whether waiting helps or hurts your claim, and protect your deadlines while settlement discussions continue. Call CONTACT NUMBER to discuss your options and timing.
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.