If the insurance company’s offer does not cover your medical bills, lost wages, pain, and future needs, you can negotiate, invoke North Carolina’s Unfair Claim Settlement Practices statute, and file a lawsuit within the three-year statute of limitations. Document every loss, present a strong demand package, and be ready to litigate.
Start by collecting every record that proves the full extent of your loss:
Include:
Because of contributory negligence, the insurer may deny your claim if it can pin even minimal fault on you. Strengthen liability with:
Include a detailed letter, evidence index, and a deadline (usually 30 days) for a reasonable response. Cite North Carolina’s unfair-claims statute—N.C. Gen. Stat. § 58-63-15(11)—which prohibits insurers from:
Follow up with phone calls and emails that reference every piece of evidence. Ask the adjuster to explain any deductions line by line. Document all conversations in a claim journal.
If the at-fault driver’s liability limits are too low, explore underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-279.21. Provide your carrier with written notice before settling the liability claim, or you may waive UIM benefits.
If the carrier violates § 58-63-15(11), submit an online complaint. While this will not directly award damages, it can push the adjuster toward a fair offer.
The statute of limitations for personal-injury claims is three years from the crash date (N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52(5)). File suit in the county where the wreck occurred or where any defendant resides. Once a lawsuit is filed, the insurer must turn the matter over to defense counsel, often triggering higher settlement offers.
Imagine you were rear-ended in Durham. The adjuster offers $12,000, covering only your visible medical bills. You gather all PT records, a letter estimating $8,000 for future knee surgery, wage statements showing $4,500 in lost time, and a pain journal. Your demand totals $55,000. You cite § 58-63-15(11), file a Department of Insurance complaint, and prepare a lawsuit. Two weeks before trial, the carrier settles for policy limits of $50,000 plus $5,000 from your UIM policy.
An undervalued claim can leave you paying for someone else’s negligence. North Carolina law gives you tools to fight back, but strict deadlines apply. Our firm has years of experience holding insurers accountable. Call us today at 919-313-2737 for a free consultation and let us pursue the full compensation you deserve.