How do I determine how much I can recover under my uninsured motorist policy?: North Carolina

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How do I determine how much I can recover under my uninsured motorist policy? - North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, your uninsured motorist (UM) recovery is capped at your UM policy limits and cannot exceed your proven damages. In some situations, you may be able to combine (stack) certain UM coverages, but policy language and North Carolina law control when stacking is allowed. You must also account for legal offsets and required lien repayments (for example, Medicaid or State Health Plan). Preserve your rights by filing suit within three years and properly serving your UM insurer if you sue the at-fault driver.

Understanding the Problem

You want to know how much you can actually collect under your North Carolina UM coverage after a crash caused by an uninsured driver. You’re the injured person, and there’s a dispute between insurers about who must pay. Your goal is to figure out the ceiling of available UM insurance and the rules that control your payout in North Carolina.

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina law, UM coverage pays when the at-fault driver has no liability insurance or in certain hit-and-run situations. The amount recoverable is the lesser of your proven damages and the applicable UM limits, adjusted by any lawful offsets and required lien repayments. If you sue the at-fault driver, your UM insurer has specific rights and must be served so it can defend the claim. The main forum is Superior Court, and the core deadline for bodily injury is generally three years from the crash.

Key Requirements

  • Covered event and insured status: The at-fault vehicle is uninsured (or qualifies as hit-and-run under state rules), and you are an insured under a UM policy.
  • Policy limits and stacking: Start with the UM limits on your declarations page; limited stacking across certain policies may apply depending on your role (named insured/resident relative vs. occupant) and policy language.
  • Damages proved: You must prove your losses (medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, etc.); recovery cannot exceed proven damages even if limits are higher.
  • Offsets and liens: Account for any policy offsets and mandatory reimbursement of liens (for example, Medicaid or State Health Plan), which are paid from your recovery.
  • Preserve the claim: File within the statute of limitations and, if you sue the at-fault driver, properly serve your UM insurer so it can appear and defend.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: You were injured by an uninsured driver, so UM applies. Start with your UM limits on your policy; that is your maximum unless stacking law and your policy allow combining other UM coverages in your household. Because insurers are disputing who pays, your ceiling does not change, but timing may. Build your damages, subtract any valid offsets, and plan for lien repayments (for example, Medicaid or State Health Plan) from the gross recovery.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: The injured person. Where: Superior Court in the county where the crash occurred or where the defendant resides in North Carolina. What: A civil complaint against the at-fault driver; also serve your UM insurer under state law so it can defend. When: File within three years of the crash for bodily injury.
  2. Insurers investigate liability, damages, and coverage. If a coverage dispute continues, a party may file a declaratory judgment action in Superior Court to resolve which policy applies and in what amount. Some policies also allow or require arbitration for UM amount disputes.
  3. Resolution occurs by settlement, arbitration award, or judgment. The UM insurer pays up to the applicable UM limits, with required lien repayments handled from the recovery.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Settling or dismissing your claims against the at-fault driver without your UM insurer’s written consent can jeopardize UM benefits.
  • Hit-and-run claims have extra proof requirements; prompt reporting and corroboration are often required—missing them can bar UM coverage.
  • Failing to serve your UM insurer when you sue the at-fault driver can forfeit the insurer’s obligation to pay.
  • Stacking rules are technical and depend on insured status and policy language; do not assume all vehicles or policies can be combined.
  • Overlooking liens (for example, Medicaid, Medicare, or State Health Plan) can delay payment or reduce net funds later; plan for reimbursements from the start.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, your UM recovery equals the lesser of your proven damages and the UM limits that apply, adjusted for any lawful offsets and required lien repayments. To protect your benefits and value, identify all applicable UM policies, confirm whether stacking applies, and serve your UM insurer if you sue the at-fault driver. The key next step is to file any needed lawsuit in Superior Court within three years and ensure proper service on your UM carrier.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you're dealing with an uninsured driver claim and need to confirm your true UM limits, stacking options, and lien obligations, 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.

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