What are my options if the insurer refuses to increase their settlement offer?

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What are my options if the insurer refuses to increase their settlement offer? - North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, if an insurer will not raise its offer, you can keep negotiating with stronger proof of liability and damages, escalate to a supervisor, try pre-suit mediation by agreement, or file a lawsuit against the at-fault party before the statute of limitations expires. For third-party claims, you sue the responsible person or business—not the insurer. North Carolina generally allows three years to file most personal injury claims, and unfair claim-handling concerns can be reported to the Department of Insurance.

Understanding the Problem

You’re negotiating a North Carolina personal injury claim through your attorney, and the insurance adjuster won’t budge from an opening offer that doesn’t reflect your medical expenses, diagnostic charges, and pain and suffering. The decision point is: can you compel a higher offer now, or do you pivot to a different strategy—up to and including filing suit in North Carolina court—to protect your claim?

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina law, insurers are not required to pay more than they believe a claim is worth, but they must handle claims fairly. When negotiations stall, your leverage comes from (1) the quality of your liability and damages proof, and (2) your readiness to file a lawsuit before the deadline. Personal injury lawsuits are filed in North Carolina trial courts, and most have a three-year limitations period. After suit is filed, Superior Court cases are typically ordered to mediation, creating another structured opportunity to resolve the claim.

Key Requirements

  • Solid proof of liability and damages: Medical records, bills, diagnostic reports, lost wage documentation, and consistent treatment help justify a higher number.
  • Right defendant and forum: In third-party claims, sue the at-fault driver or business in the proper North Carolina court and county; you generally cannot sue the liability insurer directly.
  • Preserve the deadline: File suit before the limitations period runs for personal injury claims.
  • Expect court-ordered mediation after filing: Superior Court civil cases are typically referred to a mediated settlement conference.
  • Fair-claims standards: If claim handling appears unfair, you can complain to the North Carolina Department of Insurance, which regulates insurers.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, the adjuster’s opening offer does not reflect your medical expenses, diagnostic charges, or pain and suffering. Your attorney can strengthen the demand package with organized bills, records, provider notes on causation and necessity, and a concise damages summary to justify an increase. If the carrier still will not move, the next leverage point is filing suit against the at-fault party before the three-year deadline, which typically triggers defense counsel involvement and court-ordered mediation—another chance to resolve at a fair value.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: The injured person (through counsel). Where: File a civil Complaint with the Clerk of Superior Court in the county where the defendant resides or where the accident occurred; use a Civil Summons (AOC-CV-100). What: Complaint + Civil Summons; serve the defendant under Rule 4. When: File before the three-year statute of limitations for personal injury expires.
  2. After service, the defendant typically has 30 days to answer (extensions are common). The court will set deadlines; Superior Court cases are usually ordered to a mediated settlement conference within the litigation schedule.
  3. Cases end by settlement, dismissal, or trial. A settlement produces a signed release; a trial results in a judgment entered by the court.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Contributory negligence: Any fault on the injured person can bar recovery in North Carolina, which can limit leverage in negotiations.
  • No direct action against the insurer (third-party claims): You generally must sue the at-fault person or business, not their insurer.
  • UM/UIM or MedPay differences: First-party claims under your policy can have different procedures and deadlines; check the policy and act promptly.
  • Medical liens and documentation: Unresolved liens, treatment gaps, or missing records often suppress offers; organize bills and address liens early.
  • Release risk: Do not sign a final release until treatment is complete or your attorney advises; you typically cannot reopen the claim.

Conclusion

When an insurer will not increase its offer in a North Carolina injury claim, your leverage is stronger evidence and the willingness to file suit against the at-fault party before the three-year deadline. Expect court-ordered mediation after filing in Superior Court. If negotiation stalls, take the next step: file a Complaint and Civil Summons with the Clerk of Superior Court before the limitations period expires.

Talk to a Personal Injury Attorney

If you’re facing a stalled settlement offer and need to protect your claim and timeline, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and next steps. Call us today to talk through your situation.

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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