Does Health Insurance Cover Auto Accidents in California?

Yes, your health insurance will cover medical bills from a car accident. That part is straightforward. What trips people up is everything that happens after.
California is a fault-based state, which means the driver who caused the crash is responsible for your medical costs. But liability insurance pays out at the end of a claim, not while you’re sitting in the ER. So your health insurance steps in, covers your treatment, and then quietly files a claim against your eventual settlement to get its money back. That process is called subrogation, and it can eat a significant chunk of what you thought was yours.
The short version: health insurance covers the bills, but it wants to be reimbursed. And how much it can take depends on the type of plan you have, whether you have an attorney, and a California statute most people have never heard of.
Key Takeaways
Priority
Health insurance covers auto accident injuries in California, but it acts as a secondary payer — and will seek reimbursement from your personal injury settlement through subrogation.
California Civil Code § 3040 caps health insurance liens at one-third of your settlement if you have an attorney. Without one, the cap jumps to one-half.
→ Hiring counsel literally cuts the lien in half
If your health coverage comes through a self-funded employer plan (ERISA), California’s lien protections may not apply at all. Federal law overrides them.
→ Check your plan documents before you assume you’re protected
MedPay is not mandatory in California. It pays regardless of fault with no deductible — but only if you purchased it on your auto policy.
Health insurance covers medical treatment only. Lost wages, pain and suffering, vehicle damage, and disability accommodations all fall outside its scope.
How Does the Insurance Payment Order Work in California?
People assume there’s a clean sequence. Call your insurer, file a claim, and get paid. The reality is messier than that because multiple insurance policies can overlap, and none of them are in a rush.
The at-fault driver’s liability insurance carries the legal responsibility. California requires minimum bodily injury coverage of $30,000 per person and $60,000 per accident (those limits went up from $15,000/$30,000 in January 2023). But liability insurers don’t write checks while you’re still in a neck brace. They pay when the claim resolves, which could be six months from now or two years.
In the meantime, if you carry MedPay on your auto policy, that kicks in first. No fault determination required, no deductible, no copay. It just pays. Typical MedPay limits in California range from $1,000 to $10,000, so it covers immediate costs but runs out fast on anything serious. According to the California Department of Insurance, MedPay is optional coverage that you “may be offered” when purchasing auto insurance. It is not required, and a lot of drivers don’t carry it.
Your health insurance fills the gap. It covers ER visits, surgery, physical therapy, imaging, prescriptions, all of it, subject to your normal deductibles, copays, and network restrictions. And then it waits for the settlement.
What Is a Subrogation Lien and How Does It Affect Your Settlement?
Once your health insurer pays your accident-related bills, it has a legal right to recover that money from your personal injury settlement. The mechanism is a lien on your settlement proceeds.
Say your health plan paid $45,000 in medical bills. You settle with the at-fault driver’s insurer for $100,000. Your attorney takes a standard one-third fee ($33,333). Your health insurer files a subrogation lien for the full $45,000. After attorney fees plus the lien, you’re left with about $21,667 from a six-figure settlement.
California Civil Code § 3040 is the statute that limits this. For Knox-Keene HMOs and state-regulated health plans, the law caps lien recovery at one-third of the total settlement amount when the injured person has an attorney. The statute also requires the insurer to share proportionally in your attorney’s fees under what’s known as the Common Fund Doctrine, which can further reduce the lien.
There’s also the Made Whole Doctrine, an equitable principle holding that your health insurer cannot collect through subrogation until you have been fully compensated for all your losses. If a settlement doesn’t cover your total damages (medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, future care costs), the insurer’s recovery can be reduced or blocked entirely.
Both of these protections sound comprehensive. They are, unless your health insurance comes through your employer.
Why Does ERISA Override California’s Lien Protections?
This is where the two-tier system shows up. If your health insurance is a self-funded employer plan governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), federal law preempts California’s state protections. Section 3040’s lien caps don’t apply. The Made Whole Doctrine doesn’t apply. The plan’s own contractual language controls, and most ERISA plans include aggressive reimbursement provisions.
The Supreme Court confirmed this in Sereboff v. Mid Atlantic Medical Services (2006). The Sereboffs’ ERISA health plan paid about $75,000 in medical expenses after a car accident. When the couple settled the personal injury case for $750,000, the plan demanded full reimbursement and won. The Court held that ERISA plans can enforce contractual reimbursement as an “equitable lien by agreement,” regardless of state law.
Over 60% of covered workers nationally are enrolled in self-funded employer plans. If you’re one of them and you get into an accident in California, the state’s lien protections may not help you. Check your plan documents. If it says “self-funded” or “self-insured,” ERISA likely applies.
What Will Health Insurance Not Cover After a Car Accident?
Health insurance is strictly medical. Everything else falls outside its scope, and the list is longer than most people realize:
- Lost wages and lost earning capacity while you recover (or permanently, if the injuries are severe enough)
- Pain and suffering, including anxiety, depression, PTSD, and loss of enjoyment of life
- Vehicle damage, repair costs, rental cars, and diminished value
- Home modifications like wheelchair ramps or bathroom retrofits for permanent disabilities
- Funeral and burial costs in wrongful death cases
These categories typically make up the majority of damages in serious injury cases. A liability insurance claim or civil lawsuit is the only path to recovering them.
What Should You Do Right After a California Car Accident?
The insurance billing order matters, and getting it wrong can create problems months down the line.
Use MedPay first if you have it. It pays immediately without affecting your health insurance deductible or triggering subrogation rights. If you’re unsure whether your auto policy includes MedPay, call your auto insurer and ask. Takes two minutes.
Notify your health insurer, but understand what you’re starting. The moment your health plan pays an accident-related claim, the subrogation clock begins. They will track those payments and assert a lien when a settlement materializes. This is normal. It happens in virtually every case.
Talk to an attorney before you accept any settlement offer. An adjuster’s first offer almost never accounts for lien negotiation, future medical costs, or the full value of your non-economic damages. California has a two-year statute of limitations on personal injury claims, so there is time, but not unlimited time.
If the at-fault driver is uninsured or underinsured, your own UM/UIM coverage activates as a backstop. California law requires insurers to offer this coverage with every bodily injury liability policy, and most drivers carry it unless they specifically decline in writing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does health insurance exclude auto accidents?
Not under modern plans. Before the Affordable Care Act, some policies contained auto accident exclusion clauses. The ACA’s non-discrimination provisions and essential health benefits requirements effectively eliminated those exclusions for individual and small-group plans. Some older grandfathered employer plans may retain limited exclusion language, but it’s rare.
Will using health insurance reduce my settlement amount?
Not directly, but subrogation will reduce what you take home. The settlement amount itself is based on your total damages. The issue is that your health insurer will claim a portion of it to recoup what it paid. With a skilled attorney, those liens are negotiable, and California law provides tools to reduce them significantly.
What if I don’t have MedPay or auto medical coverage?
Your health insurance still covers treatment. You’ll pay your normal cost-sharing (deductible, copays, coinsurance), and the insurer picks up the rest, subject to your plan’s terms. Some medical providers also agree to treat accident victims on a lien basis, deferring payment until settlement. The at-fault driver’s liability coverage remains the ultimate source of reimbursement, but you’ll likely need an attorney to recover it.
Injured in a California car accident and unsure which insurance to use first? Contact DK Law for a free consultation. We’ll help you navigate the billing, negotiate liens, and protect your settlement.
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