How do I find a doctor or facility that will treat me on a lien basis for my personal injury case?: North Carolina Personal Injury

Woman looking tired next to bills

How do I find a doctor or facility that will treat me on a lien basis for my personal injury case? — North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, many providers will consider treating you under a medical lien or a letter of protection when you have a personal injury claim. State law gives qualifying medical providers a lien on your settlement and requires your lawyer to pay perfected liens from the settlement before you receive funds, subject to a cap and pro‑rata sharing rules. The fastest path is to work through your attorney, who can connect you with lien‑friendly providers and issue a letter of protection.

Understanding the Problem

You’ve been injured in North Carolina and need medical care, but you can’t pay upfront. You want to know if you can find a doctor or facility willing to delay payment and be paid later from your injury settlement. This question sits squarely in personal injury: can you secure treatment now based on a lien or letter of protection, and what rules govern how those medical bills get paid at settlement?

Apply the Law

North Carolina law recognizes medical provider liens in personal injury cases and allows payment of those liens from settlement proceeds. A “medical lien” is a legal claim by a health care provider against your recovery for reasonable and necessary charges related to your injury. A “letter of protection” is your attorney’s written promise to pay the provider from any settlement. Providers perfect liens by giving written notice to your lawyer or the insurer before funds are disbursed. Disputes are typically handled in Superior Court if needed, but most are resolved by your attorney during settlement disbursement. Attorney’s fees come off the top first; then valid medical liens are paid, subject to a statutory cap and pro‑rata sharing among providers.

Key Requirements

  • Written notice (perfection): The provider must send written notice of its lien to your attorney or the liability insurer before settlement funds are disbursed.
  • Records access: Providers asserting a lien must make related records/bills available upon request for a reasonable charge.
  • Attorney’s fees first: Your lawyer’s reasonable fee is paid before medical liens are satisfied from the settlement.
  • 50% cap on provider liens: The combined amount paid to medical lienholders cannot exceed one‑half of the recovery after attorney’s fees; providers share pro‑rata if funds are short.
  • Government reimbursement can differ: Medicaid, Medicare, or the State Health Plan may have separate reimbursement rights that can override general caps or require specific handling.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: With no specific facts given, here’s how the rules play out in common scenarios. If you settle for $30,000 and your attorney’s fee is $10,000, up to $10,000 (one‑half of the remaining $20,000) can be paid to perfected medical lienholders; if their combined bills exceed that, they share pro‑rata and any balance generally remains your responsibility. If Medicaid or Medicare paid some bills, those programs may require reimbursement under their own rules, which your attorney will address during disbursement.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: Your attorney initiates provider outreach. Where: In your North Carolina community; no filing with the Clerk of Superior Court is typically required. What: Your lawyer issues a letter of protection and the provider sends written lien notice to your lawyer/insurer. When: Ideally before treatment begins or as soon as possible after the first visit, and always before settlement funds are disbursed.
  2. The provider treats you and sends periodic bills. Your attorney keeps a running ledger, requests itemized records, and confirms lien perfection. Timeframes vary by provider and county practice.
  3. At settlement, your attorney deducts fees/costs, negotiates medical liens as needed, pays perfected liens up to the statutory cap and pro‑rata, addresses any government reimbursement, and then distributes your net recovery with a written settlement statement.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Not every provider accepts liens. Larger hospitals and some specialists may require traditional billing or health insurance; your attorney can help identify lien‑friendly options.
  • Unperfected liens may not be enforceable against the settlement; providers need timely written notice to your attorney/insurer.
  • Government programs (Medicaid/Medicare/State Health Plan) have separate reimbursement rules that can supersede general caps. Failing to address these can delay disbursement.
  • If total liens exceed the cap, providers are paid pro‑rata, which may leave balances. Discuss balance‑resolution strategies with your attorney before treatment ends.
  • Do not privately promise payment terms to a provider without coordinating with your attorney; it can complicate lawful disbursement.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, you can often obtain care on a lien basis through a letter of protection, and qualifying providers can assert liens that are paid from your settlement after attorney’s fees. Those liens share pro‑rata and are capped at one‑half of the net recovery after fees, while government reimbursement may follow distinct rules. The next step: ask your attorney to issue a letter of protection and confirm lien terms with a provider before treatment and long before settlement funds are disbursed.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you’re dealing with injury care you can’t afford upfront and need providers willing to accept a lien or letter of protection, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at 919-313-2737.

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.

Categories: 
close-link