In North Carolina, a fair personal injury settlement reflects the strength of liability (and any contributory fault), your documented losses, available insurance coverage, and what will be left after attorney’s fees, costs, and liens. Review the release language and lien payoffs before you sign. If you have potential underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage, get your UIM insurer’s written consent before settling with the at-fault carrier to preserve your rights.
You want to know whether to accept a negotiated settlement for a North Carolina personal injury claim and how to judge if the amount is fair before signing a release. You (the injured person) must decide whether to sign the insurer’s release now that the insurer plans to send it and mail the check to your lawyer. This decision comes before the case is filed in court and while the statute of limitations still runs.
Under North Carolina law, “fair” focuses on four pillars: (1) fault and defenses (including the strict contributory negligence rule), (2) provable damages backed by records, (3) available insurance coverage and limits (including UM/UIM), and (4) how liens and subrogation will affect your net recovery. The main forum is negotiation with the liability insurer; some settlements (minors and wrongful death) need approval by the Clerk of Superior Court. The general filing deadline for personal injury is three years from the injury.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You have a negotiated compromise and the insurer will send a release and check to your lawyer. Before signing, confirm liability is reasonably clear and that contributory negligence is unlikely to defeat the claim, verify your damages are supported by records, and check the at-fault policy limits (and any UM/UIM). Have your lawyer identify and resolve all liens so you know your net recovery, and make sure the release does not waive UM/UIM rights or require inappropriate indemnity.
A fair North Carolina settlement aligns with clear liability under the state’s contributory negligence rule, documented damages, available coverage (including UM/UIM), and your net after required lien payments. Review the release to avoid waiving rights you still need. Before signing the release, request an itemized settlement statement that shows attorney’s fees, costs, and lien payoffs, and do this well before the three-year filing deadline.
If you’re deciding whether to accept a settlement and want to understand your net recovery, release terms, and timelines, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines.
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.