In North Carolina, “treated on a lien basis” usually means the chiropractor agreed to delay collection while your injury claim is pending, expecting to be paid out of any settlement or judgment. Whether they must be paid from the settlement depends on whether they have a valid medical lien under North Carolina law (including proper notice and documentation) or a separate enforceable agreement you signed. In practice, settlement funds often cannot be fully disbursed until valid lien claims are resolved or appropriately handled.
If you are settling a North Carolina personal injury claim and your health insurer says it is not asserting a lien, you may still be asking: can a chiropractor who treated you “on a lien basis” require payment from your settlement before you receive your money?
North Carolina recognizes certain medical-provider liens against personal injury recoveries. The basic idea is that when you recover money for an injury, certain providers who treated that injury may have a lien that attaches to the recovery—but the lien is not automatic in every situation. The provider generally must follow the statute’s steps (including giving notice and providing an itemized statement/records when requested) for the lien to be valid and enforceable against the settlement proceeds. If a provider does not have a valid statutory lien, they may still try to collect based on an agreement (often called a “lien agreement” or “letter of protection” arrangement), but that becomes a contract/collection issue rather than a statutory lien issue.
When an attorney is involved in the settlement, North Carolina law also places duties on the person holding settlement funds (often the attorney trust account) to retain enough money to address “just and bona fide” medical claims after receiving notice of them, before disbursing the rest.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, your health insurance says it is not asserting a lien, which may remove one common repayment issue. But your chiropractor treated you “on a lien basis” and expects payment from the settlement, which means you likely have (1) a medical bill still owed and (2) a claimed right to be paid from the recovery. Whether the chiropractor must be paid from the settlement depends on whether they properly asserted a valid lien under North Carolina’s medical lien statutes (including notice and, if requested by your attorney, timely itemized records) and whether there is any separate agreement you signed that affects how the settlement should be handled.
In North Carolina, a chiropractor treating you “on a lien basis” usually means they postponed collection and expect payment from your personal injury settlement, but they only have a right to be paid from the settlement if they have a valid lien under North Carolina’s medical lien statutes or an enforceable agreement you signed. The key practical step is to confirm whether the provider properly asserted the lien and supported the amount, including responding to an itemized-records request within 60 days. Next step: have your attorney request and review the chiropractor’s itemized statement and written lien notice before disbursement.
If you're dealing with a settlement that cannot be disbursed because a chiropractor or other provider says they have a lien, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand what is valid under North Carolina law, what can be disputed, and how to move the settlement closing forward on a compliant timeline. Reach out today. Call [CONTACT NUMBER].
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.