In North Carolina, you can pursue a claim against the at-fault driver even if Medicaid is your only health coverage. Medicaid may pay accident-related bills, but the State has a statutory lien on any settlement and must be repaid from it (subject to caps). Notify Medicaid early, keep treating and documenting your injuries, and protect your right to sue by tracking the filing deadline.
You were rear-ended while stopped to make a left turn in North Carolina and you have only Medicaid. Can you still recover for your injuries, and how do you handle medical bills and Medicaid’s payback rights? This question matters because your actions now affect your treatment, your settlement, and your deadline to file a lawsuit if the insurer won’t pay.
North Carolina law lets an injured person bring a bodily-injury claim against the at-fault driver (usually through the driver’s liability insurer). Medicaid can pay covered medical care but is the payer of last resort and has a statutory lien on any third-party recovery. Health care providers have lien rules too, and if they accept Medicaid payment, they generally cannot also pursue you for the balance related to that service. Lawsuits for personal injury must be filed in the General Court of Justice (District or Superior Court) within the applicable limitation period, typically measured from the crash date.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Being rear-ended while stopped to turn left tends to support negligence by the other driver, satisfying the fault element. Your ER visit the next day and ongoing back pain can establish injury and causation if your records tie symptoms to the crash. Because you have Medicaid, expect a Medicaid lien on any settlement; request the lien amount early and plan to repay within the statutory cap. Track the three-year filing deadline in case negotiations stall.
In North Carolina, you may recover from the at-fault driver even if Medicaid is your only coverage, but Medicaid has a statutory lien on any settlement, subject to caps, and must be repaid. Prove fault, document injury and treatment, and track the lawsuit deadline. File in the General Court of Justice if settlement fails. Next step: request your Medicaid lien statement from NC Medicaid’s Third Party Recovery unit; deadline to remember: file any lawsuit within three years of the crash.
If you're dealing with a rear-end crash, Medicaid billing, and lien questions, 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.