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What Is Personal Injury Law? Claims, Damages, Settlements and Legal Rights

11th Jun 2026
Written by the Lawyer Monthly editorial team This guide is a general educational overview of U.S. personal injury law for readers who want to understand how personal injury claims work, what compensation may be available, and why legal outcomes can differ from state to state. It is not legal advice. In the United States, personal injury claims are governed primarily by state law, so key rules - such as filing deadlines, comparative negligence standards, damages caps, and procedural requirements - may differ substantially by jurisdiction and by the specific facts of a case. Last updated: 11 June 2026 What Is Personal Injury Law? Personal injury law allows someone who has been harmed by another person's carelessness, wrongful conduct, or defective product to seek compensation for the losses that follow. Although people often associate it with car accidents, personal injury law is much broader. It also covers medical negligence, unsafe property conditions, workplace incidents, defective products, nursing home abuse, and some forms of psychological or reputational harm. At a practical level, personal injury law answers a straightforward question: who should bear the cost of an injury? If another party is legally responsible, the law may require that person - or, more commonly, their insurer - to compensate the injured person for medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and other related losses. For most people, a personal injury claim is not really about going to court. It is about getting treatment, protecting income, dealing with insurance companies, and understanding whether the financial consequences of an injury should fall on them or on someone else. A Note on U.S. Personal Injury Law This guide explains the general principles of U.S. personal injury law. Every state recognises personal injury claims in some form, but the detailed rules vary. Filing deadlines, comparative negligence rules, damages limits, evidential requirements, and court procedures are not uniform across the country. As a result, two people with similar injuries may face very different legal outcomes depending on where the incident happened. Why This Guide Matters A lot of legal content defines personal injury law in broad terms but stops before addressing the questions readers actually have once an injury affects their life. In practice, the hardest issues are rarely abstract definitions. They are questions like: Does this situation count as a claim? What evidence actually matters? Why is the insurer disputing value when fault seems obvious? Why do similar injuries lead to very different settlements? What changes when state law differs? This guide is designed to answer those practical questions, not just provide a basic definition. Personal Injury Law vs Property Damage A common point of confusion is the difference between personal injury and property damage. If a car is dented in a collision, that part of the claim is usually about property damage. If the driver suffers whiplash, a broken wrist, or post-traumatic stress disorder, those are personal injury issues. Many real-world cases involve both, but they are legally distinct and often assessed differently. Why Personal Injury Law Exists Personal injury law serves several functions. First, it gives injured people a legal route to recover losses they would not otherwise have suffered. Second, it encourages safer behaviour. Drivers, employers, manufacturers, healthcare providers, and property owners all have reason to reduce avoidable risks when the law may hold them financially accountable for harm. Third, it provides a structured way to resolve disputes. Without it, many people facing medical bills, lost wages, long-term disability, or continuing care needs would have little practical recourse. What Qualifies as a Personal Injury? Many people assume personal injury law only applies to serious accidents involving obvious trauma or emergency treatment. The legal question is broader than that. The key issue is whether a person suffered legally recognised harm that can be linked to another party's conduct. Physical Injuries Physical injuries are the most familiar basis for personal injury claims. Examples include: Broken bones Spinal injuries Burns Brain injuries Soft tissue injuries Loss of mobility Permanent disability Severity affects the value of a claim, but a claim does not need to involve catastrophic harm. A rear-end collision that leads to six months of physiotherapy, missed work, and continuing pain may still result in substantial losses. Psychological and Emotional Injuries Psychological harm can be just as disruptive as physical harm, even if it is discussed less clearly in basic legal content. Examples include: Anxiety Depression Post-traumatic stress disorder Emotional distress Sleep disturbance Imagine a passenger involved in a serious collision who heals physically within a few weeks but develops lasting panic symptoms or a severe fear of travelling by car. Depending on the evidence and the governing law, those psychological consequences may form part of a personal injury claim. Reputational Harm Some forms of personal injury law extend beyond bodily or emotional injury. Claims involving the following may concern damage to a person's standing, liberty, or legal rights: Defamation Malicious prosecution False imprisonment Certain privacy violations Financial Losses Connected to Injury The injury itself is often only the beginning of the problem. Much of the real impact appears in the financial losses that follow. These may include: Lost wages Reduced future earning capacity Rehabilitation expenses Household assistance costs Travel expenses Long-term care costs In serious cases, those financial consequences can exceed the initial medical bills by a wide margin. Common Misconceptions About Personal Injury Law Several misconceptions appear repeatedly in broad personal injury searches. Misconception 1: A Personal Injury Claim Means Filing a Lawsuit Usually, it does not. Most claims begin as insurance matters and are resolved through investigation and negotiation. A lawsuit becomes necessary only if settlement is not possible on acceptable terms. Misconception 2: You Need a Criminal Case to Recover Compensation You do not. Civil claims and criminal proceedings are separate. Compensation may be pursued even where no criminal charge is filed. Misconception 3: Minor Injuries Do Not Matter Legally They can. A modest injury may still create medical expenses, time off work, rehabilitation needs, and genuine pain. Legal value depends on provable loss, not dramatic appearance. Misconception 4: If Fault Is Clear, Compensation Is Automatic Clear fault helps, but it does not end the dispute. In many claims, the real disagreement is about causation, treatment, future losses, or the value of pain and suffering. Misconception 5: Similar Injuries Have Standard Settlement Values They do not. The value of a claim depends on the wider picture: recovery time, evidence quality, lost earnings, future limitations, comparative fault, and available insurance cover. The Three Legal Foundations of Personal Injury Claims Although personal injury cases arise in many factual settings, most are built on one of three legal foundations. Understanding them helps explain why some claims succeed and why others fail. Negligence Negligence is the most common basis for a personal injury claim. In practical terms, negligence occurs when a person or organisation fails to use reasonable care and that failure causes injury. In negligence claims, the core questions usually involve whether the defendant owed a duty of care, breached that duty, caused the injury, and produced legally recognised harm. Examples include: A driver texting while driving A shop failing to clean up a spill An employer ignoring safety procedures A doctor failing to meet accepted standards of care Negligence does not require an intention to cause harm. Someone can be legally responsible even when the injury was accidental. Strict Liability Some claims do not depend on proving carelessness in the ordinary sense. That is where strict liability matters. The best-known example involves defective products. If an airbag malfunctions because of a manufacturing defect and causes injury, liability may arise even if no one intended harm and even if significant care was taken during production. The focus shifts to the defective condition of the product and its role in causing the injury. Intentional Wrongdoing Certain personal injury claims arise from deliberate conduct rather than carelessness. Examples include: Assault Battery False imprisonment Intentional infliction of emotional distress These cases often raise different issues from negligence claims, especially around evidence, insurance coverage, and damages. Negligence vs Strict Liability: What's the Difference? Although both negligence and strict liability can lead to compensation, they work differently. Issue Negligence Strict Liability What must be proven? Failure to exercise reasonable care Injury caused by a defective product or certain inherently dangerous activity Must fault be shown? Yes Not always Common examples Car accidents, slip and falls, medical malpractice Defective products, some hazardous activities Main legal question Did someone act unreasonably? Did the product or activity cause the injury? A driver who causes a collision while texting may be liable because the driver acted unreasonably. A manufacturer may face liability because a product was defective, even where no single employee behaved carelessly. That distinction matters because it changes what evidence is likely to matter most and how the claim is argued. How a Personal Injury Claim Works Many people imagine a personal injury claim starts with a lawsuit. In reality, most claims begin much earlier and develop in stages. Understanding that sequence makes the process easier to follow. A typical claim begins with an injury, followed by medical treatment, evidence gathering, insurance review, settlement discussions, and sometimes litigation. Every case is different, but the overall pattern is broadly consistent. A Real-World Example Imagine a driver is stopped at a red light when another vehicle crashes into the rear of the car. At first, the driver feels shaken and sore but assumes the discomfort will fade. Instead, neck pain worsens over the next few days, treatment becomes necessary, time off work follows, and the financial effects begin to build. What looked like an ordinary traffic incident now becomes a potential personal injury claim. Step 1: Medical Treatment Comes First The first priority is always appropriate medical care. That matters for health reasons, but it also matters legally. Medical records often become the backbone of the claim. Insurers and opposing parties will usually look at when treatment started, how consistent it was, what diagnosis was made, and whether the symptoms match the event being described. When treatment is delayed, one of the first arguments raised is often that the injury was unrelated, exaggerated, or less serious than claimed. Step 2: Evidence Is Collected Once the injury has been identified, the next issue is proof. Useful evidence may include: Accident reports Photographs Video footage Witness statements Medical records Employment records Repair estimates Receipts and expense records The strongest claims usually show a clear chain linking the incident, the injury, and the resulting losses. Step 3: Liability Is Investigated The next question is whether someone else was legally responsible. Sometimes liability is obvious. In other cases, the facts are disputed from the start. A driver may deny fault. A shop may say it had no notice of a hazard. A manufacturer may argue the product was misused rather than defective. This stage often determines whether the claim remains straightforward or becomes heavily contested. Step 4: Insurance Companies Become Involved Most personal injury claims involve insurers in some form. At this point, the focus often shifts from the accident itself to the scope of the losses. Adjusters may examine: Fault Medical treatment Injury severity Wage loss Prior medical history Future treatment needs This is one of the most important practical realities in personal injury law: even where responsibility seems clear, the value of the claim may still be strongly disputed. Step 5: Settlement Negotiations Begin Most claims end in settlement rather than trial. Negotiations usually involve an assessment of liability risk, damages evidence, future losses, witness credibility, expert support, and the likely cost of continued litigation. Settlement allows both sides to avoid the uncertainty that comes with a court decision. Step 6: A Lawsuit May Be Filed If negotiations do not produce a fair resolution, litigation may follow. Filing a lawsuit does not mean the case will definitely reach trial. In many claims, meaningful settlement discussions continue after proceedings begin and after more evidence has been exchanged. Step 7: Trial or Resolution Trials receive disproportionate public attention because they are dramatic, not because they are typical. Most personal injury claims resolve before final judgment. When they do not, a judge or jury may decide liability, damages, and the amount of compensation. That decision is binding unless overturned on appeal. Common Types of Personal Injury Cases Personal injury law follows common principles, but the practical issues vary depending on the type of case. Car Accidents Motor vehicle accidents are among the most common claims. Although they may appear simple at first, disputes often arise over fault, speed, visibility, road conditions, pre-existing symptoms, and the extent of injury-related loss. Truck Accidents Truck accident claims are often more complex because several parties may be involved at once. Potentially responsible parties include: Truck drivers Employers Maintenance contractors Vehicle owners Cargo loaders Parts manufacturers Commercial vehicle cases also tend to involve more severe injuries and more complicated insurance issues. Slip and Fall Accidents Slip and fall claims usually involve dangerous property conditions such as wet floors, broken steps, poor lighting, uneven surfaces, or unaddressed hazards. The central issue is often whether the property owner knew, or should have known, about the danger and failed to respond reasonably. Medical Malpractice Medical malpractice claims allege that a healthcare professional fell below the accepted standard of care and caused harm. These cases are often among the most demanding because they usually require expert medical evidence and careful analysis of both breach and causation. A poor medical outcome on its own is not enough. The claimant must usually show that the treatment was legally substandard and that this caused actual injury. Product Liability Product liability claims concern dangerous or defective products. Examples include: Defective vehicle components Unsafe medical devices Faulty consumer products Dangerous household items Inadequate warning labels These claims often involve technical evidence and multiple defendants in the supply chain. Workplace Injuries Many workplace injuries are dealt with through workers' compensation systems, but not all rights stop there. Some cases also involve third-party claims. A construction worker injured by defective machinery, for example, may have a claim against a manufacturer or contractor in addition to any workers' compensation rights. Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect Claims involving nursing homes often arise from neglect, poor supervision, falls, medication mistakes, abuse, poor hygiene, or failure to respond properly to medical needs. These cases frequently involve vulnerable individuals and difficult questions about standards of care, staffing, and documentation. Defamation and Reputational Harm Some personal injury claims concern damage to reputation rather than physical injury. False statements may harm a person's employment prospects, business reputation, relationships, or standing in the community. What Evidence Helps a Personal Injury Claim? Evidence often determines whether a claim is persuasive or vulnerable. Injury alone does not prove legal responsibility. A claimant usually needs to show what happened, why it happened, who caused it, and what losses followed. Medical Records Medical records are often the most important evidence in a personal injury case. They help establish: Diagnosis Treatment Prognosis Symptoms Future care needs In many claims, they become the core record against which every other part of the case is measured. Photographs and Video Photographs can capture details that later disappear. Useful material may include: Accident scenes Vehicle damage Defective products Unsafe premises Visible injuries Video footage can be especially persuasive where parties disagree about how the incident occurred. Witness Statements Independent witnesses often strengthen a claim significantly. They may confirm road conditions, weather, warning signs, hazards, timing, and the sequence of events. Their value is often greatest where the parties themselves give conflicting versions of what happened. Expert Evidence Complex claims often depend on expert analysis. Examples include: Medical specialists Engineers Accident reconstruction experts Economists Vocational rehabilitation experts Experts are often needed when the dispute turns on technical issues beyond ordinary knowledge, particularly future care, product defects, or long-term earning loss. Employment and Financial Records Where a claim includes wage loss, reduced earning capacity, or business interruption, financial documentation becomes essential. This may include: Pay records Tax returns Invoices Employment contracts Business accounts The more clearly a financial loss can be documented, the easier it is to value credibly. Common Evidence Mistakes That Can Damage a Claim Weak claims often become weak because important evidence was lost, delayed, or never documented properly. Waiting Too Long to Seek Treatment A delay can create uncertainty about both timing and causation. That gives insurers room to argue the symptoms came from something else or were not serious enough to justify prompt care. Failing to Document the Scene Photographs taken immediately after an incident may capture details that vanish quickly, such as debris, lighting conditions, standing water, or product defects. Ignoring Medical Advice Missed appointments, long treatment gaps, and incomplete care plans can all be used to challenge the seriousness of the injury or the need for future treatment. Posting on Social Media Public posts, comments, photographs, and videos are sometimes used to challenge claims about symptoms or limitations. Even ordinary content can be interpreted out of context once a dispute begins. Losing Important Documents Medical bills, receipts, wage records, repair invoices, and treatment recommendations often become central when damages are calculated. Missing paperwork can weaken an otherwise strong claim. What Must Be Proven in a Personal Injury Case? The precise legal test depends on the type of claim, but most negligence-based cases involve four core elements. Duty of Care The defendant must have owed a duty to act with reasonable care. Drivers owe duties to other road users. Doctors owe duties to patients. Property owners owe duties, in varying degrees, to lawful visitors. Breach of Duty The claimant must show the duty was breached. In simple terms, the question is whether the defendant acted as a reasonably careful person or organisation would have acted in similar circumstances. Causation The claimant must also prove a connection between the conduct and the injury. This is often one of the most heavily contested parts of a case, especially where there are pre-existing symptoms or delayed treatment. Damages Finally, there must be actual loss. Careless conduct without measurable harm usually does not produce a viable personal injury claim. The law compensates injury and loss, not near misses. How Personal Injury Laws Vary by State One of the biggest misconceptions about personal injury law is that the rules are uniform across the United States. They are not. The broad principles of negligence, liability, and compensation are widely recognised, but state law often changes how those principles apply in practice. Statutes of Limitation Every state sets legal filing deadlines known as statutes of limitation. Missing the deadline can prevent recovery even where fault is clear and the injury is serious. Deadlines vary widely by state. For example, California generally provides two years for actions involving personal injury or wrongful death under California Code of Civil Procedure Section 335.1, while New York generally provides three years for personal injury actions under CPLR 214. These examples show why filing deadlines should never be assumed from one state to another. Special rules may also apply to medical malpractice claims, government claims, minors, or latent injuries. Comparative Negligence Rules States also take different approaches where the injured person shares responsibility for the incident. For example, if a driver suffers $100,000 in damages but is found 20% responsible for a collision, compensation may be reduced accordingly. Share of Fault Total Damages Potential Recovery 0% $100,000 $100,000 20% $100,000 $80,000 40% $100,000 $60,000 Some states allow recovery even where the claimant bears substantial fault. Others cut off recovery once fault passes a certain threshold. Damages Caps Some states limit the amount that can be recovered for particular categories of damages, especially in medical malpractice cases. Procedural Differences Rules on evidence, expert testimony, notice requirements, court procedure, and appeals can also vary significantly. For that reason, personal injury law is better understood as a shared framework with state-specific rules layered on top. What Damages Can You Recover in a Personal Injury Claim? When people think about personal injury law, they usually focus on compensation. The answer is highly fact-sensitive. It depends on the injury, the losses that followed, the quality of the evidence, and the law of the state that applies. The general aim is to place the injured person, so far as money can do so, in the position they would likely have been in had the injury not occurred. Medical Expenses Medical expenses are often the easiest losses to identify. Compensation may include: Emergency treatment Hospital care Surgery Medication Physical therapy Rehabilitation Future medical treatment In serious cases, future medical costs can exceed every other category of loss combined. Lost Income Where an injury prevents someone from working, compensation may include: Lost wages Lost commissions Lost bonuses Lost self-employment income Reduced Future Earning Capacity Some injuries permanently affect the ability to earn. A construction worker who can no longer perform heavy labour, or a surgeon who loses hand dexterity, may suffer financial consequences long after the immediate recovery period ends. Pain and Suffering Not all injury-related harm appears on a bill or payslip. Pain and suffering damages attempt to compensate for the physical impact of the injury itself. Factors that may affect this part of a claim include: Severity of injury Duration of recovery Permanent limitations Effect on daily life Emotional Distress Serious accidents can create psychological consequences that outlast the physical healing period. Compensation may be sought for: Anxiety Depression PTSD Emotional trauma These claims are usually stronger when supported by treatment records or expert evidence. Household Assistance and Care Costs An injury may prevent someone from managing ordinary daily tasks. Compensation may therefore include home assistance, personal care, domestic support, and home modifications where needed. Travel and Out-of-Pocket Expenses Smaller costs can accumulate quickly during recovery. Examples include: Travel to appointments Parking charges Medical equipment Prescription costs Punitive Damages In some jurisdictions, punitive damages may be available where conduct was especially reckless, malicious, or intentional. Unlike compensatory damages, punitive damages are designed to punish and deter rather than simply reimburse loss. Why Similar Injuries Can Produce Very Different Settlements One of the most misleading assumptions in personal injury law is that injuries come with fixed values. They do not. Two people may suffer what looks like the same injury and still receive very different settlements because the wider consequences are different. Example One A driver suffers a broken wrist in a collision, incurs $8,000 in medical expenses, misses two weeks of work, and makes a full recovery. Example Two Another driver suffers a similar fracture and also incurs $8,000 in medical expenses. In this second case, however, surgery is required, six months of work are missed, chronic pain develops, and future earning ability is affected. The starting injury may look similar, but the overall legal and financial picture is not. Factors That Often Affect Settlement Value Settlement value is commonly influenced by: Severity of injury Recovery time Permanency of symptoms Quality of medical evidence Lost income Future treatment needs Comparative negligence Insurance policy limits This is why comparisons based on headlines or anecdotal settlements are often misleading. How Personal Injury Settlements Are Calculated There is no universal formula for calculating a personal injury settlement. Instead, insurers, lawyers, and courts assess a range of financial and non-financial factors. Economic Damages Economic damages are measurable financial losses. Economic Damage Example Medical bills Hospital treatment Lost wages Time away from work Future earnings loss Reduced earning capacity Rehabilitation Physical therapy Care costs Ongoing assistance Non-Economic Damages Non-economic damages are harder to measure but often equally important. Non-Economic Damage Example Pain and suffering Physical discomfort Emotional distress Anxiety or PTSD Loss of enjoyment of life Inability to take part in hobbies Permanent impairment Long-term limitation Settlement Evaluation in Practice Imagine an injured driver who incurs: $25,000 in medical expenses $15,000 in lost wages Several months of treatment Ongoing neck pain The likely settlement value is not determined simply by adding the bills and lost wages together. Decision-makers may also consider long-term impact, credibility of the evidence, likely future treatment, comparative fault, and litigation risk. That is why settlement discussions often involve substantial disagreement even where liability appears straightforward. Why Settlement Negotiations Often Become Disputes Many injured people expect the main argument to be about who caused the incident. In practice, disputes often centre on the value of the claim. Example: Liability Is Accepted but the Claim Is Disputed Imagine a driver is rear-ended while stationary at a traffic light. The insurer accepts its policyholder caused the collision. Liability is not the battleground. The disagreements instead concern whether treatment was necessary, whether symptoms were caused by the accident, whether future treatment will be needed, and how much income was actually lost. Example: Future Losses Become the Battleground A construction worker suffers a shoulder injury and cannot return to heavy manual work. Medical bills total $30,000 and lost income reaches $20,000. The worker argues future earning capacity has been permanently reduced. The insurer argues other suitable work remains available and that the projected losses are overstated. In cases like these, the biggest disagreement is often about the future rather than the past. Why Insurance Companies Dispute Personal Injury Claims Many people assume that once fault is clear, compensation follows automatically. In reality, insurers often dispute claims at several different levels. Liability Disputes An insurer may argue its policyholder was not responsible or that more than one party shares fault. Pre-Existing Injuries A common defence is that symptoms existed before the incident. For example, an insurer may argue that back pain pre-dated a collision and was not caused, or not entirely caused, by the event in question. Low Settlement Offers Early offers are often based on incomplete information. As treatment continues and evidence develops, the valuation of the claim may change significantly. Surveillance and Social Media In higher-value claims, insurers sometimes review public social media content or carry out surveillance. Images, activity, or comments may then be used to challenge the seriousness of the alleged limitations. Disputes Over Future Losses Future medical treatment, future earnings, and long-term care are often the most contested parts of a claim because they depend on prediction as well as proof. Common Mistakes That Hurt Personal Injury Claims Many valid claims become harder to prove because of avoidable mistakes made in the early stages. Delaying Medical Treatment Treatment gaps can create questions about both causation and severity. Ignoring Medical Advice Missed appointments and incomplete treatment records can undermine a claim. Failing to Preserve Evidence Photographs, witness details, incident reports, and damaged items can become difficult to recover later. Posting on Social Media Public posts may be reviewed and used to challenge claims about injury severity or activity restrictions. Assuming an Insurer Will Automatically Offer Fair Compensation Insurance companies assess claims independently and may dispute liability, damages, causation, or future losses. Missing Filing Deadlines Even a strong claim can fail entirely if the legal deadline is missed. How Long Do You Have to File a Personal Injury Claim? Every state imposes filing deadlines known as statutes of limitation. These deadlines determine how long an injured person has to bring a claim. Why Deadlines Matter A missed deadline can bar recovery regardless of how serious the injury is or how strong the evidence may be. Why Deadlines Differ Limitation periods vary by both state and claim type. Different rules may apply to: Medical malpractice claims Claims involving minors Claims against government entities Wrongful death claims Because these deadlines vary, they should never be guessed at. Even where a state provides a general deadline for personal injury claims, exceptions and shorter notice rules may apply. Do Most Personal Injury Cases Go to Trial? No. Most personal injury claims are resolved through negotiated settlement. Trials attract attention precisely because they are unusual. Settlement often offers faster resolution, lower cost, and greater certainty for both sides. When trials do occur, they usually involve major disputes over liability, damages, or both. The Real Constraint Most People Miss Many people focus almost entirely on proving that an accident happened. In practice, the harder part is often proving what the injury cost in human and financial terms. An insurer may accept that a collision occurred and still challenge: Future treatment costs Future earning losses Long-term disability Emotional distress damages That is why strong personal injury claims are built not only on evidence of the incident, but also on evidence showing how the injury changed daily life, work, treatment needs, and future prospects. Related Guides Readers who want more detail on specific personal injury topics would usually need separate guides on: How statutes of limitation work in personal injury claims What damages can be recovered in a personal injury case What evidence strengthens a personal injury claim Negligence vs strict liability in personal injury law Frequently Asked Questions About Personal Injury Law What is personal injury law? Personal injury law allows people who suffer physical, emotional, psychological, reputational, or related financial harm because of another party's conduct to seek compensation through the civil justice system. What qualifies as a personal injury? A personal injury can include bodily injury, emotional or psychological harm, reputational damage, and financial losses connected to the underlying injury. The key issue is whether legally recognised harm occurred and can be linked to another party's conduct. What is negligence? Negligence happens when a person or organisation fails to use reasonable care and that failure causes injury. Most personal injury claims are built on negligence. What is comparative negligence? Comparative negligence is a rule used in many states when both sides share responsibility. The injured person's compensation may be reduced by their percentage of fault. What damages can be recovered in a personal injury claim? Depending on the case, damages may include medical expenses, lost income, future earnings loss, pain and suffering, emotional distress, rehabilitation costs, care costs, and other related losses. What is pain and suffering? Pain and suffering refers to the physical pain, discomfort, and limitations caused by an injury. It is different from economic loss because it is not measured simply through bills or receipts. Can emotional distress be compensated? Yes. Emotional distress can be recoverable in many personal injury claims, especially when supported by treatment records, diagnosis, or expert evidence. What evidence is most important in a personal injury case? Medical records are often the most important evidence, but photographs, witness statements, reports, employment records, video footage, and expert opinions may also be critical. What should I do immediately after an accident? Seek medical attention, report the incident where appropriate, document the scene if possible, gather witness details, and preserve records relating to treatment and expenses. How long do I have to file a personal injury claim? The deadline depends on the state and the type of claim. Every jurisdiction sets statutes of limitation, and some categories of case have special timing rules. What is a statute of limitations? A statute of limitations is the legal time limit for starting a claim. Missing it can prevent recovery even where the claim would otherwise be strong. What if I was partly at fault? Partial fault does not necessarily prevent recovery. In many states, comparative negligence rules reduce compensation according to the claimant's share of responsibility. How are personal injury settlements calculated? They are usually assessed by looking at medical costs, lost income, future losses, injury severity, recovery period, evidence quality, and litigation risk rather than by applying a single fixed formula. Why do insurance companies deny or dispute claims? They may dispute fault, challenge the seriousness of injury, question future loss projections, argue symptoms pre-dated the incident, or disagree with the value of damages. Do most personal injury cases go to trial? No. Most claims settle before trial. How long does a personal injury claim take? There is no fixed timetable. Some claims resolve in months, while serious or disputed cases may take much longer. Are personal injury settlements taxable? Under IRS rules, compensation for personal physical injuries or physical sickness is generally not taxable, but punitive damages, interest, and some other parts of a settlement may be taxable. The tax treatment depends on what the payment is intended to compensate. Can I bring a personal injury claim without a lawyer? People are generally allowed to represent themselves, but serious or contested claims are often difficult to handle without legal assistance. What is a wrongful death claim? A wrongful death claim is a civil action arising from a death allegedly caused by another party's negligence, recklessness, or wrongful conduct. What is the biggest mistake people make after an injury? One of the most common mistakes is delaying medical treatment, because treatment gaps can make it harder to prove both causation and seriousness. Sources and Legal References California Code of Civil Procedure Section 335.1 New York CPLR 214 IRS guidance on the taxability of settlements California Courts Self-Help Guide: Personal Injury Cases New York City Bar: Personal Injury overview

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