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        <title><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Attorney - Steven M. Sweat]]></title>
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                <title><![CDATA[What Happens After You Hire a California Personal Injury Lawyer? A Client’s Step-by-Step Guide]]></title>
                <link>https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/what-happens-after-you-hire-a-california-personal-injury-lawyer-a-clients-step-by-step-guide/</link>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/what-happens-after-you-hire-a-california-personal-injury-lawyer-a-clients-step-by-step-guide/</guid>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Steven M. Sweat]]></dc:creator>
                <pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2026 22:49:03 GMT</pubDate>
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Law]]></category>
                
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Attorney]]></category>
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Lawyer]]></category>
                
                
                
                <description><![CDATA[<p>By Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC 30+ years representing California injury victims | Super Lawyers since 2012 | Avvo 10.0 Quick Answer After you sign a retainer with a California personal injury lawyer, here is what happens, in order: (1) within 24–48 hours, your attorney sends letters of representation to all insurance companies,&hellip;</p>
]]></description>
                <content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p><em>By Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC</em></p>



<p>30+ years representing California injury victims | Super Lawyers since 2012 | Avvo 10.0</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Quick Answer</strong> <strong>After you sign a retainer with a California personal injury lawyer, </strong>here is what happens, in order: (1) within 24–48 hours, your attorney sends letters of representation to all insurance companies, ending direct adjuster contact with you; (2) your attorney opens an investigation — gathering the police report, medical records, photos, witness statements, and surveillance video; (3) you focus on medical treatment while the firm handles every claim communication; (4) once you reach maximum medical improvement (MMI), your attorney calculates damages and sends a demand letter; (5) negotiations open, and most cases settle in this phase, typically within 6–12 months from the date of the accident; (6) if the insurer refuses to pay fair value, your attorney files a lawsuit before the two-year statute of limitations under <em>California Code of Civil Procedure §335.1</em>; (7) the case enters litigation — discovery, depositions, mediation, and trial preparation; (8) 95–97% of cases settle before trial, often at mediation or the mandatory settlement conference; (9) when settlement is reached, your attorney negotiates medical liens, deducts the contingency fee and case costs, and disburses your net recovery — typically within 30–45 days of the signed release.</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p>You signed the retainer. The fee agreement is complete, you have a copy, and your attorney has officially taken your case. Now what? For most injured Californians, this is the moment the process becomes opaque. The phone calls slow down. You are not in court. You are not in mediation. So what is your lawyer actually <em>doing</em>?</p>



<p>This guide answers that question — week by week and month by month — from the client’s perspective. It is the chronology a real California personal injury case actually follows after retention, what your attorney is doing behind the scenes, what you should be doing (and not doing), and what to realistically expect at each milestone.</p>



<p>If you are still earlier in the process — deciding whether to hire a lawyer at all, or evaluating attorney candidates — start here instead: <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/hiring-a-lawyer-vs-handling-your-own-personal-injury-claim/">Hiring a Lawyer vs. Handling Your Own Personal Injury Claim</a>. For the legal-procedural timeline (demand phase, motions, mandatory settlement conference, trial), see our <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/timeline-of-a-personal-injury-case-in-california/">Timeline of a Personal Injury Case in California</a>. This article focuses specifically on the client experience from the moment you sign the retainer through the day the settlement check clears.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-phase-1-the-first-48-hours-after-you-hire-your-lawyer">Phase 1: The First 48 Hours After You Hire Your Lawyer</h1>



<p>This is the single most active phase of the case for your law firm. Most clients do not realize how much happens in the 24–48 hours after a retainer is signed.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-letters-of-representation-go-out-same-day">Letters of Representation Go Out Same Day</h3>



<p>The first thing a competent California personal injury firm does is send <strong>letters of representation</strong> — formal notices to every insurance carrier and party involved that you are now represented by counsel and that all communications must go through the firm. This typically goes out the same day the retainer is signed, by both email and U.S. mail.</p>



<p>The legal effect is immediate and important. Under California <a href="https://www.calbar.ca.gov/Portals/0/documents/rules/Rule_4.2-Exec_Summary-Redline.pdf">Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 4.2</a> — and the parallel rule for insurance adjusters — once an opposing party knows you are represented, they cannot communicate with you directly about the claim. Every adjuster phone call, every recorded-statement request, every settlement offer must now go through your lawyer. If you are still receiving calls from the at-fault driver’s insurance company more than 48 hours after retention, that is a problem you should flag with your firm immediately.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-your-first-intake-conference">Your First Intake Conference</h3>



<p>Within the first day or two, you will have a longer intake conference — usually with the attorney handling your case and a paralegal. This is more thorough than the consultation that led to retention. Plan to spend 60–90 minutes on the following:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>A complete narrative of the accident </strong>— what you saw, what you heard, what you said, what the other driver said, where the impact occurred, vehicle positions, weather, traffic signals.</li>



<li><strong>Every medical complaint </strong>— even injuries you think are minor. Soft-tissue injuries that seem trivial in week one frequently develop into significant issues by month three. Document them now.</li>



<li><strong>Every potentially relevant insurance policy </strong>— your auto liability, your uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage, your med-pay, any health insurance, any disability coverage, any homeowner’s umbrella. Bring declaration pages.</li>



<li><strong>Pre-existing conditions </strong>— anything that involved the same body part injured in the accident. Hide nothing. Defense attorneys will find it, and the only thing worse than a pre-existing condition is a pre-existing condition you didn’t disclose to your own lawyer.</li>



<li><strong>Witness names and contact information </strong>— your firm will reach out to them while their memories are fresh.</li>



<li><strong>Photos and video </strong>— upload everything from your phone. Scene photos, vehicle damage, your injuries, anything posted to social media.</li>
</ul>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Critical: Lock down your social media now</strong> Set every social account to private. Stop posting anything related to your physical activities, mood, or the accident. Defense investigators routinely scrape Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and LinkedIn for content they can take out of context to argue your injuries are not as serious as claimed. A photo of you smiling at a birthday party becomes “plaintiff appeared in good spirits and physically active on [date].” Do not delete existing posts — that creates spoliation problems. Just stop adding new ones, and never accept friend requests from people you do not know.</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-phase-2-weeks-1-4-investigation-and-evidence-preservation">Phase 2: Weeks 1–4 — Investigation and Evidence Preservation</h1>



<p>With representation established, your firm now spends the first month locking down evidence before it disappears. Most clients are surprised at how much investigation work happens — work they never see.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-your-firm-is-doing">What Your Firm Is Doing</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Ordering the police report. </strong>In California, the official traffic collision report (CHP 555 or local equivalent) is typically available 5–14 days after the accident. Your firm orders it the same week you sign.</li>



<li><strong>Sending preservation-of-evidence letters. </strong>If a commercial vehicle, rideshare, or business is involved, your attorney sends formal letters demanding that surveillance video, dashcam footage, electronic control module (“black box”) data, driver logs, and maintenance records be preserved. Most surveillance video is overwritten within 7–30 days, so this is time-critical.</li>



<li><strong>Identifying every defendant. </strong>This is one of the most underappreciated parts of personal injury work. The driver who hit you may have been on the clock for an employer (creating respondeat superior liability), driving for a rideshare company, operating a defective vehicle, or driving on a roadway with a known dangerous condition maintained by a public entity. Each additional defendant adds an insurance policy and increases your potential recovery.</li>



<li><strong>Identifying every insurance policy. </strong>Beyond the at-fault driver’s primary liability coverage, your attorney looks for excess/umbrella policies, employer coverage if the defendant was working, your own underinsured motorist coverage, and any med-pay benefits.</li>



<li><strong>Witness interviews. </strong>Your firm’s investigator contacts witnesses while memories are fresh and gets recorded statements (with their permission) that lock in their account before defense counsel can get to them.</li>



<li><strong>Scene photography and reconstruction. </strong>If the case involves disputed liability, an investigator will document the scene with measurements, photographs, and sometimes drone footage. In serious-injury cases, an accident reconstruction expert may be retained early.</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-you-should-be-doing">What You Should Be Doing</h3>



<p>In the first month after retention, your only job is to focus on three things:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Get medical treatment, consistently. </strong>Follow every doctor’s recommendation. Attend every appointment. Do the physical therapy. Take the medications as prescribed. Gaps in treatment are the single most damaging thing to a personal injury case — adjusters argue (correctly) that if you stopped treating, you must have gotten better.</li>



<li><strong>Document everything. </strong>Keep a simple journal. One short entry per day: pain level (0–10), what activities you couldn’t do, sleep quality, mood, missed work. This becomes powerful evidence of pain and suffering damages later.</li>



<li><strong>Forward everything to your firm. </strong>Every letter from any insurance company, every bill, every notice from any party — forward it. Do not respond to anything. Do not negotiate anything. Do not give anyone a recorded statement, including your own insurance company without first checking with your attorney.</li>
</ol>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>If a public entity is involved, the clock is much shorter than two years</strong> If your accident involved a city bus, a county vehicle, a state employee on duty, a roadway defect maintained by a public agency, or any government employee, <a href="https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=911.2.&lawCode=GOV">California Government Code §§910 and 911.2</a> require an administrative claim to be filed within <strong>six months </strong>of the accident. Miss that deadline and the case is generally dead, regardless of the two-year personal injury statute. This is one of many reasons retaining counsel quickly matters.</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-phase-3-months-1-6-medical-treatment-and-records-collection">Phase 3: Months 1–6 — Medical Treatment and Records Collection</h1>



<p>This is the longest phase of most cases, and the one where clients get the most anxious. From your perspective, very little visible progress is happening: you are going to medical appointments, you are still in pain, and you are not seeing settlement money. From your firm’s perspective, this phase is doing the most important work in the case — building the medical record that will determine your settlement value.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-why-settling-now-is-a-bad-idea">Why Settling Now Is a Bad Idea</h3>



<p>Insurance companies often make their first offer during this phase, and the offer is almost always far below fair value. Adjusters know that injuries — particularly back, neck, and brain injuries — frequently take six to twelve months to fully reveal themselves. They want to settle before you and your doctors know what you actually have. The single most expensive mistake an injury victim can make is settling before reaching maximum medical improvement (MMI). For more on this dynamic, see our analysis: <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/will-i-get-less-money-if-i-hire-a-personal-injury-lawyer-in-california-the-real-math-backed-by-30-years-of-settlement-data/">Will I Get Less Money If I Hire a Personal Injury Lawyer in California?</a>.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-maximum-medical-improvement-mmi-actually-means">What Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) Actually Means</h3>



<p>MMI is the point at which your treating physicians determine that further medical treatment is unlikely to meaningfully improve your condition. You may still have ongoing symptoms — pain, restricted range of motion, permanent impairment — but the trajectory of recovery has plateaued. MMI is what allows your attorney to value the case, because only at MMI can a treating doctor write a final report describing your residual condition, your permanent impairment, and your future medical needs.</p>



<p>MMI typically occurs anywhere from three months out (for soft-tissue injuries that fully resolve) to two-plus years out (for surgical cases, traumatic brain injuries, or spinal cord injuries). Your attorney’s pace is calibrated to your medical timeline, not the other way around.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-records-collection">Records Collection</h3>



<p>Once you reach MMI — or once the medical picture is clear enough — your firm orders complete records and bills from every treating provider. This sounds simple but is the single most time-consuming administrative task in personal injury work. California hospitals and medical groups routinely take 30–90 days to fulfill records requests. Records arrive piecemeal, often incomplete, and frequently in the wrong format. Your paralegals are calling, faxing, and re-requesting throughout this entire phase.</p>



<p>For a deeper look at how this medical timeline drives settlement value, see <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/how-long-do-settlement-negotiations-take-timeline-delays/">How Long Do Settlement Negotiations Take? Timeline & Delays</a> and <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/understanding-car-accident-settlement-values-in-california/">Understanding Car Accident Settlement Values in California</a>.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-phase-4-demand-and-negotiation">Phase 4: Demand and Negotiation</h1>



<p>Once your medical record is complete and your damages are quantifiable, your attorney prepares the demand package. This is the document that drives the entire settlement negotiation.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-goes-into-a-demand-package">What Goes Into a Demand Package</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>A liability narrative. </strong>A factual and legal explanation of why the defendant is responsible — citing the police report, witness statements, traffic laws, and any photographic or video evidence.</li>



<li><strong>Medical records and bills. </strong>Complete records from every provider, organized chronologically, with billing summaries.</li>



<li><strong>A future medical care projection. </strong>If you have permanent injuries, this section forecasts the cost of ongoing treatment, often supported by a life-care planner or treating physician’s narrative report.</li>



<li><strong>Lost wage documentation. </strong>Pay stubs, W-2s, employer verification letters, and (for self-employed clients) tax returns and profit/loss statements.</li>



<li><strong>A pain and suffering narrative. </strong>Often the most persuasive section — describing in detail how the injury has affected your life. This is where your daily journal pays off.</li>



<li><strong>Photographs. </strong>Of the scene, the vehicles, your injuries, your scars.</li>



<li><strong>A specific demand. </strong>A dollar figure backed by everything above.</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-how-the-insurer-responds">How the Insurer Responds</h3>



<p>Under California Insurance Code §790.03 and the implementing fair-claims-practices regulations, insurers are required to acknowledge a claim within 15 days, accept or deny within 40 days of receiving sufficient information, and pay accepted claims within 30 days. In practice, response timelines stretch — particularly on larger claims. Expect the first substantive response within 30–60 days of the demand.</p>



<p>The first counter-offer is almost never the final number. Settlement negotiation in personal injury cases is a structured back-and-forth, often lasting 30–90 days, sometimes longer. Your attorney handles every communication. You are not on these calls. You are kept informed of every offer and counter-offer in writing.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-when-cases-settle-in-this-phase">When Cases Settle in This Phase</h3>



<p>Most California personal injury cases — particularly those with clear liability and full insurance coverage — settle during this pre-litigation negotiation phase. Once both sides arrive at a number you authorize, the insurer issues a settlement check and a release agreement, and the case moves to closeout (Phase 6 below).</p>



<p>If the insurer refuses to negotiate in good faith — common with certain carriers — your case moves to litigation. For an in-depth look at how specific insurance companies behave during this phase, see our analyses of <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/geico-auto-accident-claims-california-what-the-adjuster-wont-tell-you/">GEICO</a>, <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/filing-a-state-farm-insurance-claim-after-a-car-accident-in-california-what-the-adjuster-wont-tell-you/">State Farm</a>, <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/filing-an-allstate-insurance-claim-after-a-car-accident-in-california-what-the-adjuster-wont-tell-you/">Allstate</a>, and <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/filing-a-progressive-insurance-claim-after-a-car-accident-in-california-what-the-adjuster-wont-tell-you/">Progressive</a>.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-phase-5-litigation-when-the-case-doesn-t-settle">Phase 5: Litigation (When the Case Doesn’t Settle)</h1>



<p>Approximately 30–40% of personal injury claims do not settle during pre-litigation negotiation and require a lawsuit to be filed. The deadline to file is set by <a href="https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=335.1.&lawCode=CCP">California Code of Civil Procedure §335.1</a> — generally two years from the date of injury — and your attorney files well before that deadline if a settlement cannot be reached.</p>



<p>Filing a lawsuit does <strong>not</strong> mean your case is going to trial. Approximately 95–97% of filed cases still settle before a jury verdict — they just settle on a different timeline and through different mechanisms. For a comprehensive comparison of settling versus trying a case, see <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/settling-vs-going-to-trial-which-gets-you-more-money/">Settling vs. Going to Trial — Which Gets You More Money?</a>.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-litigation-looks-like-for-you">What Litigation Looks Like for You</h3>



<p>Once a complaint is filed and served, the case enters the litigation phase. Here is what you can expect as the client:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Written discovery. </strong>Both sides exchange written questions (interrogatories), document requests, and requests for admissions. Your attorney drafts your responses. You will need to spend a few hours reviewing and verifying answers under penalty of perjury, but this is mostly attorney work.</li>



<li><strong>Your deposition. </strong>This is the most significant client-facing event in litigation. Defense counsel will question you under oath, with a court reporter present, typically for 3–6 hours. Your attorney will spend at least one full prep session with you beforehand. You answer truthfully, concisely, and only the question asked. You do not volunteer information. Most depositions are uneventful for clients who are well-prepared and honest.</li>



<li><strong>Defense medical examination. </strong>The defense is entitled to have you examined by a doctor of their choosing — typically an orthopedic surgeon or neurologist who works heavily for insurance companies. You attend, you cooperate, and your attorney prepares you for the dynamic in advance.</li>



<li><strong>Mediation. </strong>Most California personal injury cases that get filed settle at mediation — a confidential, voluntary settlement conference with a neutral third party (often a retired judge). Mediations typically last a full day and frequently result in settlement.</li>



<li><strong>Mandatory Settlement Conference. </strong>If mediation does not resolve the case, every California civil case must go through a court-ordered settlement conference under California Rules of Court, Rule 3.1380, before trial. Many cases that survive mediation settle at the MSC.</li>



<li><strong>Trial. </strong>If everything else fails, your case is tried before a jury. Trial in Los Angeles Superior Court is typically reached 2–3 years after filing due to court backlogs.</li>
</ul>



<p>For a comprehensive procedural deep-dive into the litigation process — including discovery rules, motion practice, CCP §998 offers, and trial procedure — see <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/timeline-of-a-personal-injury-case-in-california/">Timeline of a Personal Injury Case in California</a>.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-phase-6-settlement-liens-and-disbursement">Phase 6: Settlement, Liens, and Disbursement</h1>



<p>Once a settlement is agreed to — whether in pre-litigation negotiation, at mediation, at the MSC, or after a verdict — your case enters closeout. This is the phase that converts a settlement number into money in your bank account, and it is more complicated than most clients expect.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-step-1-the-release-agreement">Step 1: The Release Agreement</h3>



<p>The defense drafts a written settlement agreement and release. Your attorney reviews it for problematic terms — overbroad release language, indemnity provisions, confidentiality clauses, tax-reporting language — and negotiates revisions. Once it is acceptable, you sign it. Once the insurer receives the signed release, they have 30–45 days under California law to issue the check, though most pay within 14–30 days.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-step-2-the-check-arrives-at-your-lawyer-s-trust-account">Step 2: The Check Arrives at Your Lawyer’s Trust Account</h3>



<p>The settlement check is made payable to you and your attorney jointly. Under California State Bar rules, it is deposited into the firm’s IOLTA client trust account. It does not go directly to you. This is normal, required by the Rules of Professional Conduct, and protects everyone involved.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-step-3-lien-resolution">Step 3: Lien Resolution</h3>



<p>This is the part of the case that quietly determines how much you actually take home, and it is where an experienced firm pays for itself many times over.</p>



<p>If health insurance, Medi-Cal, Medicare, or a hospital paid for any of your accident-related medical care, they have a statutory or contractual right to be reimbursed from your settlement. These are called liens or subrogation claims. A typical California personal injury settlement involves one or more of the following:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Health plan liens </strong>(ERISA plans, HMOs, PPOs) — often negotiable.</li>



<li><strong>Medi-Cal liens </strong>— governed by Welfare and Institutions Code §14124.70 et seq., subject to mandatory reduction formulas.</li>



<li><strong>Medicare liens </strong>— federal lien, must be resolved through CMS.</li>



<li><strong>Hospital liens </strong>under California Civil Code §3045.1 — capped at 50% of the settlement after attorney’s fees.</li>



<li><strong>Med-pay reimbursement </strong>— usually owed back to your own auto carrier if they paid medical bills.</li>



<li><strong>Treating provider liens </strong>— common in personal injury cases where doctors treated you on a lien basis pending settlement.</li>
</ul>



<p>Your attorney negotiates each of these liens down. A skilled negotiator can routinely cut hospital and provider liens by 30–60% — money that goes directly to you, not to the lien holder. This work happens before disbursement and is one of the highest-value tasks your firm performs.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-step-4-the-settlement-statement-and-disbursement">Step 4: The Settlement Statement and Disbursement</h3>



<p>Before any money is paid out, your attorney prepares a written settlement statement showing:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Gross settlement amount</li>



<li>Attorney’s fee (the agreed contingency percentage)</li>



<li>Case costs (filing fees, deposition costs, expert fees, records fees, mediator fees, etc.)</li>



<li>Each lien holder, the original demand, and the negotiated payoff</li>



<li><strong>Net to client</strong></li>
</ul>



<p>You review and sign the settlement statement. Your attorney then disburses the funds — paying the lien holders, paying case costs, paying the firm’s fee, and writing you a check (or initiating an electronic transfer) for your net recovery. From signed release to money in your account, expect 30–60 days, depending on lien complexity.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-putting-it-all-together-a-realistic-timeline">Putting It All Together: A Realistic Timeline</h1>



<p>Below is what a typical California personal injury case looks like end-to-end. Your case will vary based on injury severity, liability disputes, and insurance coverage.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><thead><tr><td><strong>Time From Retention</strong></td><td><strong>Phase</strong></td><td><strong>What Is Happening</strong></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Day 1–2</td><td>Representation</td><td>Letters of representation sent. Insurance contact stops. Intake conference completed.</td></tr><tr><td>Week 1–4</td><td>Investigation</td><td>Police report ordered. Evidence preservation letters sent. Witnesses interviewed. All policies identified. Defendants confirmed.</td></tr><tr><td>Month 1–6+</td><td>Medical Treatment</td><td>You focus on getting better. Firm tracks records and bills as treatment progresses. Reach Maximum Medical Improvement.</td></tr><tr><td>Month 6–9</td><td>Demand & Negotiation</td><td>Records collected. Demand package sent. Negotiation with adjuster. Most cases settle here.</td></tr><tr><td>Month 9–24</td><td>Litigation (if needed)</td><td>Lawsuit filed. Discovery, depositions, mediation, MSC. ~95% settle in this phase.</td></tr><tr><td>Year 2–3+</td><td>Trial (rare)</td><td>Reached only if all other resolution efforts fail. Jury trial in California Superior Court.</td></tr><tr><td>After settlement</td><td>Closeout & Disbursement</td><td>Release signed. Liens negotiated. Settlement statement issued. Net check delivered (30–60 days).</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-can-delay-your-case-and-what-cannot">What Can Delay Your Case (and What Cannot)</h1>



<p>Clients often ask why their case is taking longer than they expected. The honest answer is that some delays are unavoidable and some are tactical. Knowing the difference helps.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-legitimate-delays">Legitimate Delays</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Your medical condition has not stabilized. </strong>Cases cannot be valued before MMI. Pushing to settle prematurely loses money.</li>



<li><strong>Multiple defendants. </strong>Coordinating settlement among multiple insurers takes longer than negotiating with one.</li>



<li><strong>Disputed liability. </strong>If fault is contested, additional investigation, expert work, and sometimes accident reconstruction are required.</li>



<li><strong>Records collection. </strong>Hospitals genuinely take 30–90+ days to produce complete records.</li>



<li><strong>Court backlogs. </strong>Los Angeles Superior Court trial dates are routinely set 2–3 years out. This is structural, not anyone’s fault.</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-tactical-delays-by-insurers">Tactical Delays by Insurers</h3>



<p>Some delays are intentional. Common adjuster tactics include reassigning your file to a new handler mid-case (which restarts internal review), requesting documents they have already received, claiming “supervisor approval” that never materializes, and slow-walking responses to demand packages. An experienced firm anticipates these tactics and pushes back, including by filing suit when delay tactics indicate the insurer has no intention of negotiating fairly.</p>



<p>For a deeper look at how settlement timelines actually work in California, see <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/how-long-do-car-accident-settlements-take-in-california/">How Long Do Car Accident Settlements Take in California?</a>.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions</h1>



<div class="schema-faq wp-block-yoast-faq-block"><div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1778098156846"><strong class="schema-faq-question">How often will I hear from my lawyer after I sign?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">Expect substantive contact at every meaningful milestone — when investigation findings come in, when the demand is sent, when an offer is received, when liens are negotiated. Between milestones, weeks may go by without contact, particularly during the medical-treatment phase. That is normal and a sign of a healthy case, not a problem. If you have questions or concerns at any time, you should be able to reach a paralegal or attorney within one business day.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1778098167286"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Can I still see my own doctors?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">Yes, and you should. Your treating relationships are your own. Your attorney does not direct your medical care. Some firms refer clients to specific providers when needed, but the choice is always yours.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1778098197887"><strong class="schema-faq-question">What if my case is taking too long?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">If your treatment is complete and your file feels stalled, ask for a status conference with your attorney. A reputable firm will tell you exactly what is happening and what the next milestone is. If the answer feels evasive, you have the right to request your file and consult another attorney for a second opinion. You can change attorneys at any time, though doing so during litigation can complicate fee arrangements.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1778098268553"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Will I have to go to court?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">Probably not. Approximately 95–97% of California personal injury cases settle without trial. The most likely formal proceedings you will personally attend are your deposition (if a lawsuit is filed) and a defense medical examination. You generally do not appear at hearings, mediations are optional for you to attend, and trials are rare.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1778098278844"><strong class="schema-faq-question">How much will I actually take home?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">Net recovery depends on three things: the gross settlement, the contingency fee, and the size of your medical liens. In California, the standard contingency fee is 33⅓% pre-litigation and 40% if a lawsuit is filed. Case costs are deducted in addition to the fee. Liens vary widely. Your attorney provides you with a written settlement statement showing every deduction before disbursement, and you have the right to question any line item.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1778098291260"><strong class="schema-faq-question">What is the difference between this guide and the Personal Injury Case Timeline article?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">This guide focuses on the <strong>client experience</strong> — what you will see, what you should be doing, and what your firm is doing on your behalf at each stage. The <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/timeline-of-a-personal-injury-case-in-california/">Timeline of a Personal Injury Case in California</a> article is a more legal-procedural deep-dive into the demand phase, motion practice, mediation, mandatory settlement conferences, CCP §998 offers, and trial procedure. They are companion pieces.</p> </div> </div>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Free consultation — Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC</strong> If you have been injured in California and want to understand exactly what would happen after you hire our firm, call us. The consultation is free, the conversation is confidential, and there is no obligation. We have represented injured Californians for over 30 years on a contingency-fee basis — you pay nothing unless we recover money for you. <strong>Phone: </strong>866-966-5240&nbsp;&nbsp; |&nbsp;&nbsp; <strong>Email: </strong>ssweat@victimslawyer.com <strong>Los Angeles: </strong>11500 W. Olympic Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90064 <strong>Huntington Beach: </strong>7755 Center Ave., Suite 1100, Huntington Beach, CA 92647 <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/">victimslawyer.com</a></td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p><em>Disclaimer: This article provides general legal information and is not legal advice. Reading this article does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every personal injury case is unique. Consult a licensed California attorney about the specific facts of your situation.</em></p>
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                <title><![CDATA[Will I Get Less Money If I Hire a Personal Injury Lawyer in California? The Real Math, Backed by 30+ Years of Settlement Data]]></title>
                <link>https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/will-i-get-less-money-if-i-hire-a-personal-injury-lawyer-in-california-the-real-math-backed-by-30-years-of-settlement-data/</link>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/will-i-get-less-money-if-i-hire-a-personal-injury-lawyer-in-california-the-real-math-backed-by-30-years-of-settlement-data/</guid>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Steven M. Sweat]]></dc:creator>
                <pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2026 20:26:53 GMT</pubDate>
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Law]]></category>
                
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Attorney]]></category>
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Lawyer]]></category>
                
                
                
                <description><![CDATA[<p>Key Takeaways Short answer: No. In nearly every California personal injury case, an injured claimant nets more money after attorney fees than they would have recovered settling alone. The Insurance Research Council has documented for decades that represented claimants recover roughly 3.5x more than unrepresented claimants — even after attorney fees are deducted.California contingency fees&hellip;</p>
]]></description>
                <content:encoded><![CDATA[
<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Key Takeaways</strong> <strong>Short answer: </strong>No. In nearly every California personal injury case, an injured claimant nets more money after attorney fees than they would have recovered settling alone. The Insurance Research Council has documented for decades that represented claimants recover roughly 3.5x more than unrepresented claimants — <strong>even after attorney fees are deducted.</strong>California contingency fees are standardized at 33.3% pre-litigation and up to 40% if a lawsuit is filed (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 6147).Attorneys add value the gross settlement number doesn’t show: lien negotiation, Howell Rule application, UM/UIM identification, accurate damages calculation, and credible litigation threat.There is a narrow category of small, fully-recovered, clear-fault cases where self-settlement is economically rational. For everything else, representation is financially superior.Free consultation: 866-966-5240. No fee unless we recover compensation.</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p>It is the question every injured Californian asks before they pick up the phone. After medical bills start arriving and the at-fault driver’s insurance company calls offering a quick settlement, the math feels intuitive: “If a lawyer takes 33%, I keep 67%. If I settle alone, I keep 100%.” On paper, settling alone looks like the better deal.</p>



<p>The math is wrong. The thing it leaves out is the only thing that matters: the gross settlement number is not fixed. It changes — dramatically — depending on whether an attorney is on the case. After 30 years representing injured Californians and watching tens of thousands of these settlements close, I can tell you with confidence that the represented client almost always nets more money than the unrepresented one. The data backs it up. The math is the proof.</p>



<p>This guide walks through that math at three settlement tiers — minor soft-tissue, surgical orthopedic, and catastrophic. It shows you exactly what an unrepresented claimant typically receives, what a represented claimant typically receives, what each one nets after fees and liens, and the seven specific levers an attorney pulls that an unrepresented claimant cannot. It also tells you the small category of cases where settling alone is genuinely fine — because honesty about that is part of the answer.</p>



<p>If you are reading this with an offer letter in front of you, the only thing you need to know before reading further is that nothing in this article costs you anything. The consultation is free. The fee is contingent on recovery. The risk is asymmetric and runs in your favor.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Have a settlement offer in hand?</strong> Free 30-minute case review by a 30-year California injury attorney before you sign anything. We tell you whether the offer is fair — not whether to hire us. Call <strong>866-966-5240</strong>&nbsp; •&nbsp; Free consultation 24/7&nbsp; •&nbsp; No fee unless we win</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-the-short-answer-in-one-paragraph">The Short Answer, in One Paragraph</h2>



<p>No, you will not get less money. In the overwhelming majority of California personal injury claims, the represented claimant nets more cash in hand than the unrepresented claimant who pockets the entire gross settlement — because the represented claimant’s gross settlement is dramatically higher to begin with. The Insurance Research Council, an industry-funded research organization that studies claim outcomes specifically to help insurers evaluate their own claims operations, has documented this outcome for decades. Represented claimants recover, on average, about 3.5x more than unrepresented claimants. That figure is net of attorney fees. After the lawyer is paid, the represented client still walks away with materially more money than they would have alone.</p>



<p>The remainder of this article is the proof: the actual numbers, the specific reasons the gross settlement moves, and the narrow exceptions where the math tilts the other way.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-three-worked-examples-unrepresented-vs-represented">Three Worked Examples: Unrepresented vs. Represented</h2>



<p>The numbers below are illustrative ranges drawn from typical California claim outcomes at three injury severity tiers. They reflect what I have seen across thousands of cases — not promises about any individual claim. Every case turns on its own facts, evidence, treatment record, and applicable insurance limits.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-example-1-minor-soft-tissue-injury-whiplash-strain-sprain">Example 1 — Minor Soft-Tissue Injury (Whiplash, Strain, Sprain)</h3>



<p>Rear-end collision. The claimant has neck and back pain, sees a chiropractor for 8–12 weeks, has $4,500 in medical bills, no MRI, no surgery, no missed work beyond a few days, and is fully recovered within four months. The at-fault driver has a $50,000 bodily injury policy.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><thead><tr><td><strong>Line Item</strong></td><td><strong>Unrepresented</strong></td><td><strong>Represented</strong></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Adjuster’s first offer</td><td>$3,500</td><td>$8,000</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Final settlement (gross)</strong></td><td><strong>$5,000</strong></td><td><strong>$22,000</strong></td></tr><tr><td>Attorney fee (33.3%)</td><td>—</td><td>($7,326)</td></tr><tr><td>Case costs advanced</td><td>—</td><td>($350)</td></tr><tr><td>Medical liens / health ins. subrogation</td><td>($4,500)</td><td>($2,800) negotiated down</td></tr><tr><td><strong>NET TO CLIENT</strong></td><td><strong>$500</strong></td><td><strong>$11,524</strong></td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p><em>Even in the smallest case category, the represented client nets roughly 23 times what the unrepresented claimant nets. The lien-negotiation alone in this example returns $1,700 to the client — more than enough to cover a portion of the attorney fee. The unrepresented claimant typically does not know that medical liens are negotiable.</em></p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-example-2-surgical-orthopedic-injury-disc-herniation-fracture">Example 2 — Surgical Orthopedic Injury (Disc Herniation, Fracture)</h3>



<p>T-bone collision. The claimant has a herniated lumbar disc requiring epidural injections and eventually a discectomy. Total medical billing of $85,000 (Howell-limited to about $32,000 actually paid by health insurance), 6 weeks of missed work, ongoing pain. The at-fault driver carries a $250,000 bodily injury policy.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><thead><tr><td><strong>Line Item</strong></td><td><strong>Unrepresented</strong></td><td><strong>Represented</strong></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Adjuster’s first offer</td><td>$35,000</td><td>$75,000</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Final settlement (gross)</strong></td><td><strong>$60,000</strong></td><td><strong>$250,000 (policy limits)</strong></td></tr><tr><td>Attorney fee (33.3%)</td><td>—</td><td>($83,250)</td></tr><tr><td>Case costs advanced</td><td>—</td><td>($3,200)</td></tr><tr><td>Health ins. subrogation</td><td>($32,000) full reimbursement</td><td>($14,000) negotiated 56% reduction</td></tr><tr><td>Lost wages already received</td><td>(included in offer)</td><td>(included in settlement)</td></tr><tr><td><strong>NET TO CLIENT</strong></td><td><strong>$28,000</strong></td><td><strong>$149,550</strong></td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p><em>The represented client nets approximately 5.3x more than the unrepresented client — $121,550 more in actual cash. The lien-negotiation alone (a 56% reduction on the health-insurance subrogation) returned $18,000 to the client. The bigger driver, however, is the gross settlement: an attorney with policy-limits demand letter experience and trial credibility extracted the full $250,000 policy limit, while the unrepresented claimant settled for less than 25% of that available coverage.</em></p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-example-3-catastrophic-injury-traumatic-brain-injury">Example 3 — Catastrophic Injury (Traumatic Brain Injury)</h3>



<p>Commercial vehicle vs. passenger car collision. The claimant suffers a moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury, requires 6 weeks of inpatient rehab, has permanent cognitive deficits, can no longer return to her prior occupation as an attorney, and has a 35-year work-life expectancy at the time of injury. Total medical billing exceeds $500,000. The defendant is a commercial trucking company with $2,000,000 in primary coverage and a $5,000,000 excess policy.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><thead><tr><td><strong>Line Item</strong></td><td><strong>Unrepresented</strong></td><td><strong>Represented</strong></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td>Adjuster’s first offer</td><td>$250,000</td><td>$2,000,000 (primary policy)</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Final settlement (gross)</strong></td><td><strong>$400,000</strong></td><td><strong>$5,500,000 (primary + partial excess)</strong></td></tr><tr><td>Attorney fee (40% post-suit)</td><td>—</td><td>($2,200,000)</td></tr><tr><td>Case costs advanced</td><td>—</td><td>($95,000)</td></tr><tr><td>Medical liens / Medicare</td><td>($500,000+) potentially full repayment</td><td>($175,000) negotiated</td></tr><tr><td><strong>NET TO CLIENT</strong></td><td><strong>Negative or near zero</strong></td><td><strong>$3,030,000</strong></td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p><em>In a catastrophic case, the unrepresented claimant frequently nets nothing or close to it. The reason: medical liens often exceed the entire unrepresented gross settlement. Without an attorney to identify excess coverage, calculate future medicals via a life-care plan, document lost earning capacity through an economist, and negotiate liens, the claimant becomes a debt collector for their own healthcare providers. The represented client, by contrast, walks away with life-changing compensation that funds 35 years of altered earning capacity.</em></p>



<p><strong><em>A note on the numbers: </em></strong><em>The figures above are illustrative composite ranges based on typical California claim outcomes at each severity tier in our practice. They are not promises or guarantees about any individual case. For a case-specific valuation, see </em><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/faq/car-accidents-faqs/how-much-is-my-personal-injury-case-worth-in-california/"><em>How Much Is My Personal Injury Case Worth in California?</em></a><em> or call us directly.</em></p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Want to know what your specific case is worth — represented vs. unrepresented?</strong> Free 30-minute attorney valuation. Bilingual English/Spanish. Available 24/7. Call <strong>866-966-5240</strong>&nbsp; •&nbsp; Free consultation 24/7&nbsp; •&nbsp; No fee unless we win</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-why-the-represented-settlement-is-always-higher-the-7-levers">Why the Represented Settlement Is Always Higher: The 7 Levers</h2>



<p>The worked examples above raise an obvious question: why would the same case produce a $5,000 settlement for one claimant and a $22,000 settlement for another? The injuries are the same. The accident is the same. The insurance company is the same. What changed?</p>



<p>The seven items below are what changed. These are the specific mechanisms an attorney applies that an unrepresented claimant cannot. Each one moves the gross settlement number. Together, they are why the IRC’s 3.5x multiplier is real.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-1-accurate-damages-calculation-including-future-medicals-and-lost-earning-capacity">1. Accurate Damages Calculation (Including Future Medicals and Lost Earning Capacity)</h3>



<p>Insurance adjusters value what is on paper. They do not volunteer to include future medical needs, future surgeries, or lost earning capacity unless those numbers are documented and presented to them by an expert. An attorney retains a life-care planner for serious cases and a forensic economist to project future losses with proper work-life expectancy and discount-rate assumptions. A 35-year-old with permanent partial disability and a six-figure income has decades of lost earning capacity ahead of them. That number, properly calculated, can dwarf the past medical bills. An unrepresented claimant rarely captures it.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-2-the-howell-rule-on-medical-specials">2. The Howell Rule on Medical Specials</h3>



<p>Under California’s Howell v. Hamilton Meats & Provisions, Inc. (2011) 52 Cal.4th 541, recovery of past medical expenses is limited to the amount actually paid by health insurance — not the full billed amount. This sounds bad for the plaintiff. In practice, attorneys turn it into a tool: the difference between billed and paid amounts becomes part of the pain-and-suffering valuation, and the documented “actually paid” figure becomes a hard floor that adjusters cannot discount further. Unrepresented claimants frequently let adjusters argue down the actually-paid number itself.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-3-medical-lien-negotiation">3. Medical Lien Negotiation</h3>



<p>If your treatment was paid by health insurance, Medicare, Medi-Cal, a hospital lien, or a personal injury lien provider, those payors typically have a right to reimbursement from your settlement. Experienced attorneys negotiate these liens aggressively. A 30%–60% reduction on a six-figure lien is not unusual. That reduction goes directly into the client’s pocket. In Example 2 above, the lien negotiation alone returned $18,000 to the client — more than enough to offset a meaningful portion of the contingency fee. Unrepresented claimants almost never know that lien reductions are negotiable, and even if they do, they lack the leverage to extract them.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-4-uninsured-underinsured-motorist-um-uim-identification">4. Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) Identification</h3>



<p>California Insurance Code § 11580 requires UM/UIM coverage on every California auto policy unless waived in writing. Many claimants do not realize their own policy has this coverage — and adjusters from the at-fault driver’s carrier will not tell them. When the at-fault driver has minimum limits ($15,000/$30,000) and your damages exceed that, your own UM/UIM policy fills the gap. An attorney’s first step on every auto case is identifying every available source of recovery. Unrepresented claimants commonly settle the third-party claim and never even open the UM/UIM claim against their own carrier.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-5-proposition-51-apportionment-in-multi-defendant-cases">5. Proposition 51 Apportionment in Multi-Defendant Cases</h3>



<p>California Civil Code § 1431.2 (Prop 51) makes economic damages joint and several but non-economic damages several-only by percentage of fault. In cases with multiple defendants — a delivery driver and his employer, a property owner and a maintenance contractor, a drunk driver and the bar that overserved him — the way fault is allocated determines whether you can collect the entire judgment. This is sophisticated litigation strategy. Adjusters do not volunteer favorable apportionments. Unrepresented claimants frequently miss entire defendants altogether (the trucking company, the dram shop, the government entity with the dangerous roadway design).</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-6-policy-limits-demand-letters-that-trigger-bad-faith-exposure">6. Policy-Limits Demand Letters That Trigger Bad-Faith Exposure</h3>



<p>Under California law, when a plaintiff makes a reasonable policy-limits demand and the insurer rejects it, the insurer can become liable for any judgment in excess of its policy limits — even amounts above the coverage they sold. This bad-faith exposure is the single largest piece of leverage a plaintiff’s attorney has against a carrier. Adjusters know which firms write effective policy-limits demands and which do not. When the demand comes from a firm with trial verdicts on its record, the carrier’s risk calculus changes immediately. An unrepresented claimant cannot create that exposure.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-7-credible-litigation-threat">7. Credible Litigation Threat</h3>



<p>This is the lever that underwrites all the others. Defense counsel rates in California typically run $250 to $500 per hour. Expert witnesses charge $500 to $2,000 per hour for deposition and trial testimony. A case that goes to trial can cost the insurer $75,000 to $250,000 in defense costs alone — before any verdict. That cost is the plaintiff’s leverage. The adjuster’s job is to resolve the claim for less than the cost of defending it. If the adjuster knows you cannot or will not file suit, that leverage evaporates and the offer collapses. An attorney with a documented trial track record changes the adjuster’s math on day one.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>We pull all 7 levers in every case.</strong> 30+ years California practice. Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum. National Trial Lawyers Top 100. Free consultation — no fee unless we win. Call <strong>866-966-5240</strong>&nbsp; •&nbsp; Free consultation 24/7&nbsp; •&nbsp; No fee unless we win</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-the-lawyer-takes-33-actually-means">What “The Lawyer Takes 33%” Actually Means</h2>



<p>California contingency fees are not a free-for-all. They are governed by California Business and Professions Code § 6147, which requires every personal injury contingency fee agreement to be in writing, to state the fee percentage, to explain how costs are handled, and to disclose how that percentage is calculated. The standard for personal injury cases is:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>33.3% of the gross recovery if the case settles before a lawsuit is filed.</li>



<li>Up to 40% of the gross recovery if a lawsuit is filed and the case proceeds through litigation or trial.</li>



<li>Lower percentages for special situations (minor’s compromises, certain workers’ compensation interactions).</li>
</ul>



<p>Two clarifications matter. First, “gross recovery” in our firm’s agreements means the total settlement or verdict amount before case costs are deducted. Some firms calculate the fee on the net (post-cost) recovery; others use gross. Both approaches are legal under California law, but the math is meaningfully different and the basis must be in writing. Always ask. Second, case costs are separate from the contingency fee. Costs are the real out-of-pocket dollars paid to third parties — medical record providers, court reporters, expert witnesses, filing fees — to investigate and prosecute the case. Our firm advances all costs and recovers them from the settlement at the conclusion of the case. There are no monthly invoices to the client during the representation.</p>



<p>The phrase “the lawyer takes 33%” collapses two distinct things. The contingency fee is one number. The settlement enhancement (the difference between an unrepresented and represented gross settlement) is a much larger number. The fee is paid out of the enhancement; the client keeps the rest of the enhancement plus everything they would have netted alone. That is why the math works out the way it does.</p>



<h4 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-for-deeper-detail-on-fees-and-case-costs-see">For deeper detail on fees and case costs, see:</h4>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/how-much-does-a-personal-injury-lawyer-cost-in-california/">How Much Does a Personal Injury Lawyer Cost in California?</a></li>



<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/california-contingency-fee-lawyer-no-win-no-fee-explained/">California Contingency Fee Lawyer: No Win, No Fee Explained</a></li>



<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/personal-injury-attorney-contract-understanding-costs-and-expenses/">Personal Injury Attorney Contract: Understanding Costs and Expenses</a></li>
</ul>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-when-settling-alone-actually-makes-sense">When Settling Alone Actually Makes Sense</h2>



<p>Honesty is part of the answer. There is a small category of California injury cases where self-settlement is economically rational, and an attorney who tells you otherwise is not being straight with you. The category is narrower than most people assume, but it is real.</p>



<p><strong>You may be able to settle alone if every one of the following is true:</strong></p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Your injuries fully resolved within a few weeks with limited treatment (under roughly $3,000–$5,000 in medical billing).</li>



<li>You did not miss meaningful work and have no lost-wage claim worth more than a few hundred dollars.</li>



<li>Liability is undisputed and clear (a clear rear-end, a documented red-light violation).</li>



<li>You have not given a recorded statement to the at-fault carrier.</li>



<li>No independent medical examination has been requested.</li>



<li>There are no medical liens against your settlement (you paid out of pocket or had no health insurance involvement).</li>



<li>The at-fault driver’s policy is at or above your damages — there is no policy-limits issue.</li>



<li>There is no commercial vehicle, rideshare, government entity, or third-party defendant in the picture.</li>



<li>You have reached maximum medical improvement and are confident no symptoms will return.</li>
</ul>



<p>If every one of those conditions is met, settling alone is a defensible economic choice. If even one is not met, the math almost always favors representation — and the consultation is free, so the cost of finding out is zero.</p>



<p><em>For a deeper decision framework, see our companion guide: </em><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/why-you-should-never-use-chatgpt-to-settle-your-own-car-accident-claim-in-california/"><em>Should I Settle My California Injury Claim Myself or Hire a Lawyer?</em></a><em> (related discussion).</em></p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-the-industry-s-own-data-shows">What the Industry’s Own Data Shows</h2>



<p>The 3.5x multiplier figure cited throughout this article is not a plaintiff’s-bar talking point. It comes from the Insurance Research Council — an industry-funded research organization whose purpose is to help insurance carriers improve their own claims operations. The IRC publishes the data because insurers use it internally. Carriers know that represented claimants cost them more. They also know that unrepresented claimants are dramatically more profitable to settle quickly.</p>



<p>The IRC has published this finding consistently for decades, across multiple study cycles. Represented claimants recover, on average, approximately 3.5 times more than unrepresented claimants — net of attorney fees. A separate IRC analysis of surgical claims found that surgical claimants who were represented recovered approximately $75,000 more, on average, than surgical claimants who were not.</p>



<p>The data exists because the insurance industry studies the data. The fact that they study it tells you everything you need to know about whether representation matters financially.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-three-common-objections-and-the-answers">Three Common Objections — And the Answers</h2>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-the-lawyer-is-going-to-take-a-third-of-my-money">“The lawyer is going to take a third of my money.”</h3>



<p>The fee is calculated on the gross settlement, not on the difference between the unrepresented and represented amount. But the practical effect is that the fee is paid almost entirely out of the settlement enhancement. In Example 2 above, the unrepresented client netted $28,000. The represented client paid $83,250 in attorney fees and netted $149,550. The fee did not come out of the $28,000 the unrepresented client would have had — the fee came out of the additional $190,000 in gross settlement that the attorney generated. The client kept $121,550 of that extra amount.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-if-my-case-is-strong-the-insurance-company-will-pay-fairly-without-a-lawyer">“If my case is strong, the insurance company will pay fairly without a lawyer.”</h3>



<p>Adjusters do not pay based on what is fair. They pay based on what they think you will accept and what they think your case would cost them in court. When you have no attorney, both numbers are low. Strength of case is necessary but not sufficient. The leverage to extract the case’s actual value comes from credible litigation capacity — which an unrepresented claimant does not have.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-i-saw-an-ad-for-a-firm-that-takes-only-25">“I saw an ad for a firm that takes only 25%.”</h3>



<p>California Business and Professions Code § 6147 governs the form of the agreement, not the percentage. A firm can charge less than 33.3% if it chooses to. Two cautions: first, ask whether that percentage applies to settlement only or also to verdict, and whether it changes if a lawsuit is filed (some advertised low fees escalate sharply at filing). Second, evaluate the firm’s actual track record — a firm that never tries cases and routes everything through pre-litigation settlement may charge less because it does less. The IRC 3.5x multiplier reflects representation by attorneys with credible trial capacity. A settlement-mill discount can produce a settlement-mill outcome.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Get a real answer about your specific case.</strong> Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC. 30+ years California practice. Bilingual English/Spanish. Free consultation 24/7. Call <strong>866-966-5240</strong>&nbsp; •&nbsp; Free consultation 24/7&nbsp; •&nbsp; No fee unless we win</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions</h2>



<div class="schema-faq wp-block-yoast-faq-block"><div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1777935011418"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Will I get less money if I hire a personal injury lawyer in California?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">No. Insurance Research Council data, accumulated across decades of industry-funded studies, shows that represented claimants in personal injury matters recover approximately 3.5 times more than unrepresented claimants on average — net of attorney fees. The represented client almost always nets more cash than the unrepresented client because the gross settlement amount is dramatically higher when an attorney is involved.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1777935020161"><strong class="schema-faq-question">How much does a personal injury lawyer take in California?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">California personal injury attorneys typically charge a contingency fee of 33.3% of the gross recovery if the case settles before a lawsuit is filed, and up to 40% if a lawsuit is filed. The fee structure is governed by California Business and Professions Code § 6147, which requires the fee agreement to be in writing and to state the percentage. There are no upfront costs to the client.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1777935029617"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Can I negotiate a higher settlement myself without a lawyer?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">In a small category of cases — minor injuries that fully resolve quickly, undisputed liability, no medical liens, and policy limits well above your damages — you can negotiate a fair settlement on your own. For cases involving significant medical treatment, missed work, surgery, permanent injuries, multiple defendants, or policy-limits issues, the math almost always favors representation.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1777935039075"><strong class="schema-faq-question">What happens if I lose the case? Do I owe anything?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">Under a contingency fee agreement, you owe no attorney fees if there is no recovery. Whether you owe case costs (filing fees, expert witnesses, deposition costs) on a no-recovery depends on the specific terms of the fee agreement. Our firm advances all case costs and absorbs them in the rare event of a no-recovery on the cases we accept. Always read the cost provision of any fee agreement carefully before signing.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1777935047586"><strong class="schema-faq-question">How does an attorney actually increase my settlement amount?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">An attorney moves the gross settlement through seven specific levers: (1) accurate damages calculation including future medicals and lost earning capacity, (2) Howell Rule application on medical specials, (3) medical lien negotiation, (4) uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage identification, (5) Proposition 51 multi-defendant apportionment, (6) policy-limits demand letters that create bad-faith exposure for the carrier, and (7) credible litigation threat. The cumulative effect of these levers is the IRC’s documented 3.5x outcome multiplier.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1777935055441"><strong class="schema-faq-question">What is the IRC 3.5x figure based on?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer">The Insurance Research Council — an industry-funded organization that studies claim outcomes for insurance carriers — has published this finding consistently across multiple study cycles. The 3.5x figure represents the average ratio of represented-to-unrepresented claimant recoveries, net of attorney fees. The data is published so that insurers can use it internally for claims management. The fact that the industry tracks it confirms representation’s financial significance.</p> </div> </div>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-bottom-line">Bottom Line</h2>



<p>The intuition that hiring a lawyer reduces your net recovery is mathematically backwards in nearly every California personal injury case. The gross settlement number is not a fixed quantity that gets divided between client and attorney. It is a number that moves — substantially — based on whether an attorney is on the case and what that attorney’s track record signals to the insurance carrier. When the gross moves up by a multiple, the contingency fee comes out of the increase, and the client keeps both their original baseline and a meaningful portion of the enhancement.</p>



<p>The Insurance Research Council documents the result. Three decades of California practice confirms it. The math holds at the small case level, the surgical case level, and especially at the catastrophic case level where unrepresented claimants frequently net nothing because liens consume the entire settlement.</p>



<p>The free consultation costs you nothing. The contingency fee costs you nothing if there is no recovery. The asymmetry runs entirely in the injured client’s favor. There is no economic case for not at least having the conversation.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Free Case Evaluation — Call 866-966-5240 (24/7)</strong> Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC&nbsp; •&nbsp; 11500 W. Olympic Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90064&nbsp; •&nbsp; Bilingual English/Spanish&nbsp; •&nbsp; victimslawyer.com&nbsp; •&nbsp; Super Lawyers since 2012&nbsp; •&nbsp; Avvo 10.0&nbsp; •&nbsp; National Trial Lawyers Top 100&nbsp; •&nbsp; Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum Call <strong>866-966-5240</strong>&nbsp; •&nbsp; Free consultation 24/7&nbsp; •&nbsp; No fee unless we win</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-about-the-author">About the Author</h2>



<p>Steven M. Sweat is the founding attorney of Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC, serving injury victims throughout Los Angeles County and Southern California for over 30 years. He has been recognized by Super Lawyers consecutively since 2012, holds an Avvo 10.0 rating, and is a member of the National Trial Lawyers Top 100 and the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum. His firm handles automobile accidents, motorcycle collisions, truck accidents, traumatic brain injuries, premises liability, and wrongful death cases on a strict contingency fee basis. The firm is bilingual in English and Spanish and is located at 11500 W. Olympic Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90064.</p>



<p><em>Disclaimer: This article provides general information about California personal injury law and is not legal advice. Outcomes vary by case. Settlement examples are illustrative and not promises of any specific result. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Consult a licensed California attorney for advice regarding your specific situation.</em></p>



<p></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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            <item>
                <title><![CDATA[Do I Have a Personal Injury Case? A California Lawyer’s Guide]]></title>
                <link>https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/do-i-have-a-personal-injury-case-a-california-lawyers-guide/</link>
                <guid isPermaLink="true">https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/do-i-have-a-personal-injury-case-a-california-lawyers-guide/</guid>
                <dc:creator><![CDATA[Steven M. Sweat]]></dc:creator>
                <pubDate>Fri, 17 Apr 2026 00:24:05 GMT</pubDate>
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Law]]></category>
                
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Attorney]]></category>
                
                    <category><![CDATA[California Personal Injury Lawyer]]></category>
                
                
                
                <description><![CDATA[<p>ARTICLE SUMMARY (QUICK ANSWER) ▸ You likely have a valid California personal injury case if another party owed you a duty of care, breached that duty through negligence, caused your injuries, and you suffered real damages (medical bills, lost wages, pain, etc.). ▸ California follows pure comparative negligence — you can recover compensation even if&hellip;</p>
]]></description>
                <content:encoded><![CDATA[
<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>ARTICLE SUMMARY (QUICK ANSWER)</strong> <strong>▸ </strong>You likely have a valid California personal injury case if another party owed you a duty of care, breached that duty through negligence, caused your injuries, and you suffered real damages (medical bills, lost wages, pain, etc.). <strong>▸ </strong>California follows pure comparative negligence — you can recover compensation even if you were partially at fault, with your award reduced by your percentage of fault. <strong>▸ </strong>The general statute of limitations for personal injury in California is two years from the date of injury (Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1). Claims against government entities require a formal notice within six months. <strong>▸ </strong>Common case types: car, motorcycle, truck, and rideshare (Uber/Lyft) accidents; slip and fall; dog bites; product liability; wrongful death. <strong>▸ </strong>Consultations with a personal injury lawyer are free, and most cases are handled on a contingency fee — you pay nothing unless you win.</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-you-were-just-hurt-now-what">You Were Just Hurt. Now What?</h1>



<p>One minute you were driving home from work. The next, a distracted driver slammed into your back bumper at 45 miles per hour. Or maybe you slipped on an unmarked wet floor at a Los Angeles grocery store. Or a loose dog charged you on a sidewalk in your own neighborhood. However it happened, the result is the same: you are hurt, you are worried about money, and your phone will not stop ringing with calls from an insurance adjuster who sounds entirely too friendly.</p>



<p>If you are reading this, you are probably asking yourself the same question thousands of Californians ask every day: <strong>“Do I actually have a personal injury case — or am I on my own?”</strong></p>



<p>I understand the uncertainty. For more than three decades, I have represented injured people across Los Angeles and California, and I can tell you that the insurance industry profits by keeping you confused and isolated. The adjuster on the phone is paid to close your claim fast and cheap — not to explain your rights under California law.</p>



<p>This guide is different. By the end of this article, you will know:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>The <strong>four legal elements</strong> every personal injury case must have</li>



<li>The <strong>specific California laws</strong> that can make or break your claim</li>



<li>The <strong>red flags</strong> that tell you your case is strong — or weak</li>



<li>How much <strong>compensation</strong> California law allows you to recover</li>



<li>Exactly what to do <strong>in the next 48 hours</strong> to protect your rights</li>
</ul>



<p>If after reading this you think you may have a case, you can reach out to our team of <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/personal-injury/">Los Angeles personal injury lawyers</a> for a free, no-obligation consultation. We handle every case on a contingency fee — which means you pay nothing unless we win.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-the-short-answer-what-makes-a-valid-personal-injury-case">The Short Answer: What Makes a Valid Personal Injury Case?</h1>



<p>Under California law, you have a valid personal injury case when <strong>all four</strong> of the following legal elements are present:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Duty of Care</strong> — the other party had a legal obligation to act safely toward you.</li>



<li><strong>Breach of Duty</strong> — they failed to meet that obligation, usually through negligence or recklessness.</li>



<li><strong>Causation</strong> — their breach actually caused your injury (both “but-for” cause and “proximate” cause).</li>



<li><strong>Damages</strong> — you suffered real, measurable harm: medical bills, lost income, physical pain, emotional distress, or property damage.</li>
</ol>



<p>If even one element is missing, California courts will not award compensation — no matter how sympathetic your story. That is why the first job of any honest personal injury attorney is to evaluate whether the four elements exist in your specific situation. Let’s break each one down in plain English.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-element-1-duty-of-care">Element #1: Duty of Care</h1>



<p><strong>“Did the other party owe you a legal obligation to act safely?”</strong></p>



<p>A <strong>duty of care</strong> is a legal responsibility one person owes to another to avoid causing foreseeable harm. It is the foundation of every negligence claim in California.</p>



<p>The California Civil Jury Instructions (CACI 401) put it simply: a person is negligent if they fail to use the care that a reasonably careful person would use in the same situation. But before you even reach the question of carelessness, there must first be a legal duty owed.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-common-examples-of-duty-in-california">Common Examples of Duty in California</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Drivers</strong> owe every other driver, passenger, pedestrian, and cyclist a duty to operate their vehicle safely and obey traffic laws (California Vehicle Code throughout).</li>



<li><strong>Property owners and businesses</strong> owe invitees a duty to keep their premises reasonably safe and to warn of known hazards (California Civil Code § 1714).</li>



<li><strong>Doctors and hospitals</strong> owe patients a duty to provide care consistent with the accepted medical standard.</li>



<li><strong>Product manufacturers</strong> owe consumers a duty to design, build, and warn about products safely.</li>



<li><strong>Dog owners</strong> owe the public a duty under California’s strict liability statute, Civil Code § 3342.</li>



<li><strong>Rideshare companies and their drivers</strong> owe passengers a <em>heightened</em> duty of care as common carriers under Civil Code § 2100.</li>
</ul>



<p>Here is a quick test: if a reasonable person would have foreseen that careless conduct could hurt someone like you, a duty almost certainly exists. A driver can foresee that speeding through a red light might hit a pedestrian. A grocery store can foresee that an unmopped spill might cause a customer to fall. Those are textbook duty scenarios.</p>



<p>Duty is rarely the contested element in most <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/car-accidents/">car accident claims in California</a> — every driver clearly owes a duty to others on the road. The fight usually begins at Element #2.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-element-2-breach-of-duty">Element #2: Breach of Duty</h1>



<p><strong>“Did they actually fail to act reasonably?”</strong></p>



<p>A breach happens when someone falls below the standard of care that a reasonably prudent person would have exercised in the same circumstances. In California personal injury cases, this is where most battles are fought.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-breach-looks-like-in-real-cases">What Breach Looks Like in Real Cases</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Car accident: </strong>a driver texts at 50 mph and rear-ends you at a red light. Using a handheld phone while driving violates California Vehicle Code § 23123, which is itself strong evidence of negligence.</li>



<li><strong>Slip and fall: </strong>a Ralphs employee sees a broken jar of pickles, walks past it without cleaning it up or placing a warning cone, and twenty minutes later you step on the spilled liquid.</li>



<li><strong>Medical malpractice: </strong>a surgeon leaves a sponge inside a patient — a clear breach of the standard of care recognized by every California hospital.</li>



<li><strong>Dog bite: </strong>an owner lets their untrained dog roam off-leash in a Los Angeles city park despite a clearly posted leash ordinance.</li>



<li><strong>Trucking: </strong>a commercial driver logs 14 straight hours behind the wheel in violation of federal Hours of Service rules (49 C.F.R. § 395).</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-negligence-per-se-the-rule-that-makes-your-case-easier">Negligence Per Se: The Rule That Makes Your Case Easier</h3>



<p>California follows a powerful doctrine called <strong>negligence per se</strong> (Evidence Code § 669). When a defendant violates a safety statute that was designed to protect people like you from the kind of harm you suffered, their violation is treated as presumed negligence. You do not have to argue that running a red light is unreasonable — the Vehicle Code already says it is.</p>



<p>This is why the police report and any citations issued matter so much. A ticket for unsafe speed, following too closely, DUI, or failure to yield can serve as the backbone of your breach argument.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Not Sure If What Happened Counts as Negligence?</strong> We’ve evaluated thousands of California cases. In 10 minutes on the phone, we can tell you if you have a claim worth pursuing. Free case review. No pressure. No fee unless we win. <strong>📞 Call (866) 966-5240&nbsp; |&nbsp; victimslawyer.com</strong></td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-element-3-causation">Element #3: Causation</h1>



<p><strong>“Did their breach actually cause your injury?”</strong></p>



<p>Causation is the connection between what the defendant did wrong and the harm you suffered. California law recognizes two parts:</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-1-actual-cause-but-for-cause">1. Actual Cause (“But-For” Cause)</h3>



<p>Ask yourself: “But for what the defendant did, would I have been hurt?” If the answer is no — the injury would not have happened without the defendant’s conduct — actual cause is established.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-2-proximate-cause-legal-cause">2. Proximate Cause (Legal Cause)</h3>



<p>Even when actual cause exists, California courts also ask whether the harm was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the conduct. A driver who speeds through a crosswalk can foresee hitting a pedestrian. But a freak chain of coincidences that no reasonable person could have predicted may break the chain of proximate cause.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-where-causation-gets-contested">Where Causation Gets Contested</h3>



<p>Insurance companies love to fight causation. Their favorite defenses include:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Pre-existing conditions: </strong>“Your back pain was already there before the accident.” California’s “eggshell plaintiff” rule (CACI 3927) directly counters this — a defendant takes the victim as they find them. If the crash aggravated a prior condition, they are liable for the aggravation.</li>



<li><strong>Delayed treatment: </strong>“You waited three weeks to see a doctor, so your injury must not be from the crash.” This is why prompt medical care matters — not just for your health, but for your case.</li>



<li><strong>Alternative causes: </strong>“Your knee pain is from jogging, not our client’s negligence.”</li>
</ul>



<p>Causation is often proven with medical records, treating physician testimony, and — in serious cases — biomechanical or accident reconstruction experts.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-element-4-damages">Element #4: Damages</h1>



<p><strong>“Did you suffer real, compensable harm?”</strong></p>



<p>You cannot sue in California just because someone was careless. They must have actually hurt you in a way the law recognizes. This is the damages element — and it is often where borderline cases succeed or fail.</p>



<p>California law allows injury victims to recover two broad categories of compensatory damages:</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-economic-special-damages">Economic (Special) Damages</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Past and future medical bills (ER, surgery, physical therapy, medications, assistive devices)</li>



<li>Lost wages and lost earning capacity</li>



<li>Property damage (vehicle repair or total loss)</li>



<li>Out-of-pocket expenses (transportation, childcare, home modifications)</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-non-economic-general-damages">Non-Economic (General) Damages</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>Physical pain and suffering</li>



<li>Emotional distress, anxiety, and depression</li>



<li>Loss of enjoyment of life</li>



<li>Disfigurement and scarring</li>



<li>Loss of consortium (claimed by a spouse for damage to the marital relationship)</li>
</ul>



<p>In rare cases involving especially egregious conduct — think drunk driving at triple the legal limit, or a company knowingly selling a dangerous product — California Civil Code § 3294 also allows <strong>punitive damages</strong>. These are designed to punish the wrongdoer, not compensate you, and they are not available in every case.</p>



<p>No damages, no case. If you walked away from a fender bender with zero injuries, a little back soreness that vanished in two days, and no car damage, there is simply nothing for the law to compensate — even if the other driver was 100% at fault.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-common-types-of-california-personal-injury-cases">Common Types of California Personal Injury Cases</h1>



<p>Almost every personal injury matter falls into one of a handful of categories. Here are the most common cases our firm handles — and the California-specific nuances that shape each one.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-car-accidents">Car Accidents</h2>



<p><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/car-accidents/">Motor vehicle collisions</a> are the single largest source of personal injury claims in California, and Los Angeles County consistently ranks among the deadliest counties in the nation for traffic fatalities. Common scenarios include:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/car-accidents/car-accident-claims-in-california/rear-end-collision-attorney-los-angeles/">Rear-end crashes</a> on the 405, 101, 10, 710, and 5 freeways</li>



<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/car-accidents/car-accident-claims-in-california/left-hand-turn-failure-to-yield-accident-attorneys-in-california/">Left-turn collisions</a> at uncontrolled intersections</li>



<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/car-accidents/car-accident-claims-in-california/dui-accident-claims-in-california/">DUI crashes</a> (which often support punitive damages)</li>



<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/los-angeles-distracted-driving-accident-attorneys/">Distracted driving</a> (phone-use crashes are epidemic)</li>



<li><a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/hit-and-run-accidents-in-los-angeles-how-to-recover-compensation-even-when-the-driver-flees/">Hit-and-run incidents</a> requiring an uninsured motorist claim</li>
</ul>



<p>California now requires minimum liability limits of $30,000 per person / $60,000 per accident for bodily injury under SB 1107 (effective January 1, 2025) — a meaningful increase from the prior $15,000/$30,000 floor that had existed since 1967. Even with the new limits, many serious crashes exceed available coverage, making uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy critical.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-motorcycle-accidents">Motorcycle Accidents</h2>



<p>Motorcyclists are roughly 29 times more likely to die in a crash than occupants of passenger vehicles, and California’s lane-splitting laws add another layer of complexity. If you were hurt on a bike, our <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/motorcycle-accidents/">Los Angeles motorcycle accident attorneys</a> understand the unique dynamics of these cases. Common issues include driver claims that the rider “came out of nowhere,” helmet-use disputes (California has a universal helmet law, Vehicle Code § 27803), and arguments about the rider’s pre-existing conditions. These cases almost always require an attorney who understands motorcycle dynamics and the unique prejudice riders face from juries.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-pedestrian-accidents">Pedestrian Accidents</h2>



<p>Los Angeles consistently ranks among the most dangerous cities in the United States for pedestrians. Pedestrians account for approximately one-third of all traffic fatalities in the city — a sobering statistic for anyone who walks to work, crosses a crosswalk, or jogs through a neighborhood in LA. When a vehicle strikes a person on foot, the injuries are almost always severe: traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, pelvic and leg fractures, and internal organ trauma are common even at relatively low impact speeds.</p>



<p>California Vehicle Code § 21950(a) requires drivers to yield to pedestrians in marked crosswalks and at unmarked crosswalks within intersections. When a driver violates this law — by running a red light, failing to stop before turning right on red, speeding through a school zone, or driving distracted — that violation is strong evidence of negligence per se under Evidence Code § 669. Insurance companies in pedestrian cases frequently try to shift blame by arguing the pedestrian stepped into traffic, was not in a crosswalk, or was distracted. California’s pure comparative negligence rule means those arguments only reduce your recovery — they do not eliminate it.</p>



<p>Key evidence in pedestrian cases includes traffic camera and surveillance footage (which can overwrite in as little as 24–72 hours), cell phone records proving driver distraction, skid-mark analysis, and eyewitness accounts. If a government entity is responsible for a dangerous roadway defect — a missing crosswalk signal, a broken curb ramp, or inadequate street lighting — a Government Tort Claim under Government Code § 911.2 must be filed within <strong>six months</strong> — a shorter deadline than the standard two-year personal injury statute of limitations. Our <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/personal-injury/pedestrian-accidents/">Los Angeles pedestrian accident attorneys</a> have handled hundreds of these claims throughout California and understand how to move quickly to preserve evidence, identify all liable parties, and build the strongest possible case for injured pedestrians and their families.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-truck-accidents">Truck Accidents</h2>



<p>Commercial trucking cases are not just big car accidents. Federal regulations under 49 C.F.R. apply: Hours of Service rules, driver qualification files, drug and alcohol testing requirements, maintenance records, electronic logging devices, and brake inspection logs. Liability can extend beyond the driver to the motor carrier, the broker, the shipper, and even the maintenance contractor. Evidence disappears fast — ELD data overwrites, black box information resets — which is why a spoliation letter sent within days of a crash can be case-defining.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-uber-and-lyft-accidents">Uber and Lyft Accidents</h2>



<p>Rideshare cases involve unique insurance structures. When a rideshare driver is logged into the app, Uber and Lyft each carry up to $1,000,000 in third-party liability coverage during active rides and en route to a passenger, with lower contingent coverage when the app is on but no ride is accepted. Our firm has extensive experience with <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/personal-injury/work-injuries/uber-and-lyft-driver-injury/">Uber and Lyft accident cases</a> and the specific claim procedures each company imposes — which are often designed to frustrate injured passengers and third parties.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-slip-and-fall-premises-liability">Slip and Fall / Premises Liability</h2>



<p>Under California Civil Code § 1714, property owners must use reasonable care to keep their premises safe. Winning a <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/personal-injury/premises-liability/slip-and-fall/">slip and fall case</a> typically requires showing the owner either knew about the dangerous condition (actual notice) or should have known because it existed long enough that a reasonable inspection would have discovered it (constructive notice). Store surveillance video, inspection logs, and employee statements become critical evidence that disappears quickly — sometimes within 30 days.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-dog-bites">Dog Bites</h2>



<p>California is one of the most victim-friendly states in the country for dog attacks. Civil Code § 3342 imposes <strong>strict liability</strong> — the owner is liable whether or not the dog has ever bitten before and whether or not the owner knew the dog was dangerous. The victim only has to prove: (1) they were bitten, (2) they were in a public place or lawfully on private property, and (3) the defendant owned the dog. Our <a href="https://www.victimslawyer.com/practice-areas/personal-injury/dog-bites/">dog bite attorney</a> team handles these claims throughout California.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-wrongful-death">Wrongful Death</h2>



<p>When negligence takes a life, California Code of Civil Procedure § 377.60 allows surviving spouses, domestic partners, children, and in some cases other dependents to bring a wrongful death action. Recoverable damages include loss of financial support, loss of household services, loss of love, companionship, comfort, and moral support. A separate “survival” action under § 377.30 allows the estate to recover the decedent’s pre-death medical expenses and — following 2022 amendments — pain and suffering up to the time of death.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-7-signs-you-likely-have-a-strong-personal-injury-case">7 Signs You Likely Have a Strong Personal Injury Case</h1>



<p>After evaluating thousands of California claims, I can usually identify a strong case within the first conversation. The following indicators suggest you should call a lawyer immediately:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Clear liability. </strong>The other party obviously broke the rules — ran a red light, was ticketed, admitted fault at the scene, or violated a clear safety statute.</li>



<li><strong>Documented injuries. </strong>You sought medical care and your records show a diagnosed injury consistent with the incident — not just vague soreness.</li>



<li><strong>Ongoing treatment. </strong>Your doctor recommended follow-up care: physical therapy, specialist referrals, imaging, or surgery. The longer the treatment, the higher the damages.</li>



<li><strong>Available insurance coverage. </strong>The at-fault party has liability insurance, or you have uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy. No insurance often means no real recovery — even with the best liability case.</li>



<li><strong>Independent witnesses. </strong>Third-party witnesses, dashcam footage, security video, or 911 audio that corroborates your account is gold.</li>



<li><strong>Concrete damages. </strong>You missed work, incurred real medical bills, or have a lasting physical limitation — not just inconvenience.</li>



<li><strong>You filed promptly. </strong>The accident happened within the last two years (or six months if a government entity is involved).</li>
</ul>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-signs-you-may-not-have-a-case-honest-red-flags">Signs You May NOT Have a Case (Honest Red Flags)</h1>



<p>Part of being an ethical attorney is telling people when they don’t have a claim. Here are the most common reasons a California personal injury case fails:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>No injury or only minor, self-resolving discomfort. </strong>Without actual damages, there is no compensable claim.</li>



<li><strong>You were primarily at fault and the other party has no insurance. </strong>Although California’s pure comparative negligence allows partial recovery, if you were 90% at fault and the defendant is judgment-proof, the case may not be economically viable.</li>



<li><strong>The statute of limitations has passed. </strong>Missing the two-year deadline (or six-month government claim deadline) is almost always fatal.</li>



<li><strong>No evidence. </strong>No police report, no witnesses, no photos, no medical records tying your injury to the event.</li>



<li><strong>You signed a release. </strong>If you already accepted a settlement check with a signed release, reopening the case is extraordinarily difficult.</li>



<li><strong>The defendant is judgment-proof. </strong>A verdict against someone with no insurance and no assets is often an unenforceable piece of paper.</li>
</ul>



<p>A candid consultation should always include an honest assessment of these red flags. If a lawyer will not tell you the weaknesses of your case, that is itself a red flag.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-california-specific-laws-that-will-shape-your-case">California-Specific Laws That Will Shape Your Case</h1>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-pure-comparative-negligence">Pure Comparative Negligence</h2>



<p>California is a <strong>pure comparative negligence</strong> state (Li v. Yellow Cab Co., 13 Cal. 3d 804 (1975)). That means even if you were 99% at fault for the accident, you can still recover 1% of your damages from the other party. The jury assigns a percentage of fault to each party, and your award is reduced by your percentage.</p>



<p>Example: a jury awards you $100,000 in damages but finds you 30% at fault. You take home $70,000. This is one of the most plaintiff-friendly comparative fault systems in the country — and it is a key reason insurance companies work so hard to shift blame onto you.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-statute-of-limitations">Statute of Limitations</h2>



<p>The general personal injury statute of limitations in California is <strong>two years from the date of injury</strong> (Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1). But critical exceptions exist:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Government entity claims: </strong>a formal government tort claim must be filed within <strong>six months</strong> under Government Code § 911.2. Miss it, and your case against the city, county, or state is almost certainly over.</li>



<li><strong>Medical malpractice: </strong>the earlier of three years from injury or one year from discovery (Code of Civil Procedure § 340.5).</li>



<li><strong>Minors: </strong>the statute is typically tolled until the child’s 18th birthday.</li>



<li><strong>Delayed discovery: </strong>in some cases (certain toxic torts, latent injuries), the clock starts when the injury was or should have been discovered.</li>
</ul>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-the-insurance-reality">The Insurance Reality</h2>



<p>California is a “fault” insurance state: the at-fault party’s insurer is responsible for your damages, not your own carrier (except for your medical payments coverage and uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage). That means insurance adjusters for the defendant have no fiduciary duty to you — zero. Their legal obligation is to their insured and to their shareholders. Everything they say and do is calibrated to minimize your recovery.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-what-compensation-can-you-actually-recover">What Compensation Can You Actually Recover?</h1>



<p>The value of a California personal injury case is driven by the severity of the injury, the clarity of liability, the available insurance, and the skill of your attorney in presenting damages. Here is what a full-value settlement or verdict can include:</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><thead><tr><td><strong>Category</strong></td><td><strong>What It Covers</strong></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td><strong>Medical Bills</strong></td><td>All past and reasonably anticipated future medical expenses — ER, surgery, imaging, PT, prescriptions, chiropractic care, mental health care, assistive devices, and long-term care.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Lost Wages</strong></td><td>Time missed from work, used sick leave, lost tips, lost commissions, and lost self-employment income.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Lost Earning Capacity</strong></td><td>Reduction in your ability to earn in the future — often supported by vocational and economic expert testimony.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Property Damage</strong></td><td>Vehicle repair or fair-market value if totaled, plus loss of use, towing, and storage.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Pain and Suffering</strong></td><td>Physical pain endured and reasonably expected in the future.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Emotional Distress</strong></td><td>Anxiety, depression, PTSD, sleep disturbance, loss of enjoyment of life.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Disfigurement</strong></td><td>Permanent scarring, amputations, loss of limb function — a significant component in many verdicts.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Loss of Consortium</strong></td><td>Your spouse’s claim for loss of companionship, society, affection, and sexual relations.</td></tr><tr><td><strong>Punitive Damages</strong></td><td>Available only where the defendant’s conduct was oppressive, fraudulent, or malicious (Civil Code § 3294).</td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<p>There is no universal formula for valuing pain and suffering in California. Juries consider the nature of the injury, the duration of recovery, the level of medical intervention required, permanent limitations, the age of the plaintiff, and the credibility of the witness. A skilled attorney’s job is to make the jury <em>feel</em> the impact on your life — not just read about it on a spreadsheet.</p>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-do-you-actually-need-a-personal-injury-lawyer">Do You Actually Need a Personal Injury Lawyer?</h1>



<p>I’ll be candid: not every California injury claim requires an attorney. Here is a straight answer about when you probably do and when you may not.</p>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-when-you-might-handle-it-yourself">When You Might Handle It Yourself</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>You were in a minor fender-bender with no injuries, only property damage.</li>



<li>You had one brief doctor visit, fully recovered within a week, and have no missed work.</li>



<li>The other driver clearly admitted fault, their insurance accepted liability immediately, and the offer feels fair relative to your documented losses.</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-when-you-absolutely-need-an-attorney">When You Absolutely Need an Attorney</h3>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li>You were hospitalized, had surgery, or received ongoing treatment.</li>



<li>You have any brain injury, spinal injury, fracture, or disc herniation.</li>



<li>Liability is disputed or the insurance company is blaming you.</li>



<li>A loved one died.</li>



<li>You were injured by a commercial vehicle, a rideshare driver, a government employee, or a hit-and-run driver.</li>



<li>The adjuster is pushing a fast settlement or asking you to give a recorded statement.</li>



<li>You are unsure what your case is worth.</li>
</ul>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-the-risks-of-going-it-alone">The Risks of Going It Alone</h3>



<p>Insurance adjusters are trained. They will ask questions designed to get you to minimize your injuries (“Are you feeling better today?”), admit partial fault (“Is there anything you could have done differently?”), and lock in a low-ball statement before you understand the full extent of your damages. A 2014 study by the Insurance Research Council found that represented claimants recovered <strong>3.5 times more</strong> on average than unrepresented claimants — even after attorney fees. That number has only grown since.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Still Wondering If You Need an Attorney?</strong> A 10-minute phone call costs you nothing and can change your financial future. Steven M. Sweat has recovered millions for injured Californians over 30+ years. <strong>📞 Call (866) 966-5240&nbsp; |&nbsp; victimslawyer.com</strong></td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-step-by-step-what-to-do-in-the-first-48-hours">Step-by-Step: What to Do in the First 48 Hours</h1>



<p>What you do in the first two days after an accident can make or break your case. Follow this checklist:</p>



<ol class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Seek medical care immediately — even if you “feel okay.” </strong>Adrenaline masks pain. Whiplash, concussions, and internal injuries commonly present 24–72 hours later. A same-day ER visit or urgent care visit establishes a medical record that ties your injuries to the incident.</li>



<li><strong>Document everything. </strong>Photograph the scene, vehicles, visible injuries, license plates, skid marks, weather conditions, and street signs. Collect names and phone numbers of every witness. Save dashcam footage and ask nearby businesses to preserve surveillance video.</li>



<li><strong>Report the incident. </strong>Call 911 for any crash involving injury or significant property damage. Make sure a police or CHP report is generated. For falls or dog bites, notify the property owner or animal control and get a written report.</li>



<li><strong>Do NOT give a recorded statement to the other side’s insurance company. </strong>You are under no legal obligation to do so before consulting an attorney. Anything you say can be twisted.</li>



<li><strong>Do NOT sign any medical authorizations from the defendant’s insurer. </strong>They use these to fish through your entire medical history for pre-existing conditions to blame.</li>



<li><strong>Follow your treatment plan. </strong>Gaps in treatment are ammunition for insurance companies. If your doctor says physical therapy twice a week, go twice a week.</li>



<li><strong>Keep a journal. </strong>Daily notes on pain levels, sleep, mood, missed activities, and functional limitations are invaluable for proving non-economic damages.</li>



<li><strong>Call a California personal injury attorney. </strong>The consultation is free. There is no obligation. You learn exactly where you stand before making any decisions.</li>
</ol>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions</h1>



<p></p>



<div class="schema-faq wp-block-yoast-faq-block"><div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700081521"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: How Do I Know if I Have a Valid Personal Injury Claim in California?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>You likely have a valid claim if another party owed you a duty of care, breached that duty, caused your injury, and you suffered real damages (medical bills, lost wages, pain, etc.). The fastest way to find out is a free consultation with a California personal injury attorney who can evaluate the facts against the four legal elements.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700083354"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: Is It Worth Suing for My Injuries?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>It’s worth pursuing a claim if your documented damages exceed what the insurance company will pay voluntarily, and if there is available insurance or assets to collect from. Most California personal injury cases settle without a lawsuit being filed — but the credible threat of litigation (and a lawyer who is willing to try the case) is usually what drives fair offers.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700084121"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: How Much Is My Personal Injury Case Worth?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>Case value depends on: the severity and permanence of your injuries, your total medical bills, lost wages, the strength of liability evidence, the at-fault party’s insurance limits, and the skill of your attorney. Minor soft-tissue cases often resolve in the low five figures; serious traumatic brain injury, spinal, and wrongful death cases can reach seven or eight figures. No honest attorney will give you a specific number without reviewing your records.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700107346"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: Can I Still Recover Compensation if I Was Partially at Fault?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>Yes. California follows pure comparative negligence, which means you can recover even if you were 99% at fault — your award is simply reduced by your percentage of fault. This is one of the most plaintiff-friendly rules in the country.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700108138"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: How Long Do I Have to File a Personal Injury Claim in California?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>The general deadline is two years from the date of injury under Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1. However, claims against government entities (city, county, state, public transit, public schools) require a formal notice within six months under Government Code § 911.2. Medical malpractice, minors’ cases, and delayed-discovery situations have their own rules. Talk to an attorney immediately to avoid missing a deadline.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700145571"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: How Much Does a Personal Injury Lawyer Cost?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>Reputable California personal injury attorneys work on a contingency fee: you pay nothing up front, nothing out of pocket during the case, and the attorney’s fee comes only from a percentage of the recovery (typically 33⅓% pre-suit and 40% after a lawsuit is filed). If there is no recovery, you owe no attorney’s fee. Ask for the written fee agreement and read it before signing.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700146202"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: Will My Case Go to Trial?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>Probably not. Industry data shows that over 95% of California personal injury cases settle before trial. However, the settlements that come in at full value are almost always the ones where the insurance company believes your attorney is ready, willing, and experienced enough to take the case to a jury.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700215084"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: What if the Person Who Hurt Me Doesn’t Have Insurance?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>First, check your own auto policy for uninsured (UM) and underinsured (UIM) motorist coverage — these coverages pay your damages when the at-fault driver has no or inadequate insurance. Second, investigate other responsible parties: employers (respondeat superior), vehicle owners (negligent entrustment), bars that over-served a drunk driver in limited circumstances, product manufacturers, or government entities. Third, look at the individual’s personal assets, though collection against uninsured individuals is often difficult.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700215990"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: Should I Talk to the Other Driver’s Insurance Company?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>No. You are not legally required to give the other side’s insurer a recorded statement, sign medical authorizations, or discuss your injuries. Polite decline. Refer them to your attorney. Adjusters are trained to obtain statements that will later be used to devalue your claim.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700216494"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: How Long Will My Personal Injury Case Take?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>Straightforward cases can resolve in 3–9 months once you finish medical treatment. Complex cases — serious injuries, disputed liability, multiple defendants, or cases that must be litigated — can take 18 months to 3 years or longer. The biggest factor is usually how long it takes you to reach maximum medical improvement, because settling before you know the full scope of your injuries is a classic way to be undercompensated.</p> </div> <div class="schema-faq-section" id="faq-question-1776700244402"><strong class="schema-faq-question">Q: Can I Switch Personal Injury Lawyers if I’m Not Happy With Mine?</strong> <p class="schema-faq-answer"><strong>A: </strong>Yes. You have an absolute right to change attorneys at any time. Your original attorney may be entitled to a lien for the reasonable value of work performed, but this is handled between the two lawyers — it should not increase your overall fee or cost you anything additional.</p> </div> </div>



<h1 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-the-bottom-line-you-don-t-have-to-figure-this-out-alone">The Bottom Line: You Don’t Have to Figure This Out Alone</h1>



<p>If you were injured because of someone else’s carelessness in California, the law is on your side — but only if you act. Insurance companies count on injured people being confused, overwhelmed, and scared to push back. Every day you wait, evidence disappears, witnesses forget, and deadlines creep closer.</p>



<p>Here is what I promise every person who calls our office:</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>A free, honest evaluation. </strong>If you don’t have a case, I will tell you — and I will tell you why.</li>



<li><strong>No fee unless we win. </strong>We advance all case costs. You pay nothing out of pocket.</li>



<li><strong>Direct attorney access. </strong>You work with me — not a paralegal, not an assembly-line case manager.</li>



<li><strong>Bilingual service. </strong>Nuestro equipo ofrece consultas gratuitas en español.</li>
</ul>



<p>For three decades I have fought for injured Californians against the largest insurance companies in the world, and I have recovered millions of dollars for clients who initially thought they had no case. The call is free. The advice is honest. The only risk is waiting too long.</p>



<figure class="wp-block-table"><table class="has-fixed-layout"><tbody><tr><td><strong>Get a Free, No-Obligation Case Review Today</strong> Call (866) 966-5240 — available 24/7, including nights and weekends. Or visit victimslawyer.com to submit your case details securely online. Serving all of California from our Los Angeles office. <strong>📞 Call (866) 966-5240&nbsp; |&nbsp; victimslawyer.com</strong></td></tr></tbody></table></figure>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading" id="h-about-the-author">About the Author</h2>



<p><strong>Steven M. Sweat</strong> is the founding attorney of Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, APC, a Los Angeles-based personal injury firm serving clients throughout California. With over 30 years of experience, Steven has been recognized by Super Lawyers (2012–present), named to the National Trial Lawyers Top 100, holds a 10.0 “Superb” Avvo rating, and is a member of the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum. He writes and speaks regularly on California tort law and has contributed to national legal publications including the National Law Review.</p>



<p><em>Office: 11500 W. Olympic Blvd., Suite 400, Los Angeles, CA 90064&nbsp; |&nbsp; Phone: (866) 966-5240&nbsp; |&nbsp; Website: victimslawyer.com&nbsp; |&nbsp; Email: ssweat@victimslawyer.com</em></p>



<p><strong><em>Legal Disclaimer: </em></strong><em>This article is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this article or contacting our firm does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every case is unique; outcomes depend on specific facts and applicable law. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. If you believe you have a personal injury claim, you should consult with a licensed California attorney about your specific situation as soon as possible to avoid any applicable statute-of-limitations deadlines.</em></p>
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