Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Can I Sue for a Car Accident with No Injuries in California?

HomeCan I Sue for a Car Accident with No Injuries in California?

Can I Sue for a Car Accident with No Injuries in California?

April 1, 2026Michelle Lysengen
Close-up of a damaged dark gray Subaru with a heavily dented rear bumper, cracked tail light, and paint scraping consistent with a rear-end collision, photographed in a parking lot.

Jump To

Every 4 minutes.

On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

Yes. California law does not require physical injuries to file a lawsuit after a car accident. If another driver’s negligence damaged your vehicle, you have the right to sue for that damage. Property damage, diminished vehicle value, rental car costs, and personal belongings ruined in the crash. All recoverable.

And this situation is far more common than people realize. Nearly 72% of all police-reported crashes nationally involve property damage only, with zero injuries. You are firmly in the majority.

Key Takeaways

  • You can sue after a car accident in California even without physical injuries. Property damage alone is enough to file a claim or lawsuit against the at-fault driver.
  • Recoverable damages include repair costs, diminished vehicle value, rental expenses, towing fees, and personal property destroyed in the crash.
  • California gives you three years to file a property damage lawsuit under Code of Civil Procedure § 338(c), which is longer than the two-year window for personal injury claims.
  • Emotional distress is generally not recoverable in a property-damage-only accident unless the at-fault driver’s behavior was intentional or extreme.
  • Hiring an attorney makes the most financial sense when the insurer is lowballing a high-value claim or disputing fault entirely.

What Damages Can You Recover Without Physical Injuries?

More than most people expect. Repair costs are the obvious ones, or actual cash value if your insurer totals the car. But that’s just the floor.

Diminished value is where claims get interesting. A vehicle with a collision history is worth less than one without, even after a flawless repair. Try selling a car with a Carfax report showing a rear-end collision. Buyers notice. California courts recognize diminished value as a legitimate damage category, though insurers will push back on it. They often rely on something called the “17c formula,” which caps the number artificially low and zeroes out vehicles over 100,000 miles. That formula is not California law. It originated from a 2001 Georgia class-action settlement involving State Farm, and Georgia’s own insurance commissioner eventually banned formula-based diminished value calculations.

You can also recover rental car costs while your vehicle was being repaired, towing and storage fees, and damaged personal property inside the car (laptops, phones, child car seats).

One area to be realistic about: emotional distress. California courts have consistently held that property damage alone won’t support an emotional distress claim. If the at-fault driver was acting recklessly or intentionally, like in a road rage incident, that changes things. A standard fender bender, though? Probably not.

How Does California’s At-Fault System Affect Your Claim?

California is a pure comparative negligence state, which matters more than people think for property-only claims. Your recovery gets reduced by your percentage of fault. Even at 80% fault, you can still recover 20% of your damages. The California Supreme Court established this principle in Li v. Yellow Cab Co. back in 1975.

The underlying legal theory is simple. California Civil Code § 1714 imposes a duty of ordinary care on everyone. Breach that duty while driving, cause damage, and you’re liable.

If the at-fault driver wasn’t the vehicle’s owner, Vehicle Code § 17150 extends liability to the owner too, so long as the driver had permission. Borrowed car situations come up more often than you’d think.

California’s minimum property damage liability coverage increased to $15,000 per accident as of January 2025, up from $5,000. That still doesn’t go very far. Body work on anything newer than about 2018 can blow past that ceiling fast, and if it does, you may need to file suit against the driver personally or tap your own underinsured motorist coverage.

When Does Hiring a Lawyer Actually Make Sense?

Not always. A straightforward property damage claim under $10,000 is usually manageable on your own. California’s small claims court handles disputes up to $10,000 for individuals, and attorneys aren’t even allowed in small claims, so the process is designed for regular people.

Where legal help starts earning its fee:

  • Total loss disputes where the insurer undervalues your car, and the gap between their offer and reality is thousands of dollars
  • Diminished value claims that the adjuster refuses to acknowledge at all
  • Liability disputes where comparative fault is genuinely contested
  • Uninsured or underinsured at-fault drivers who require a direct lawsuit

The math has to make sense. If attorney fees eat most of the recovery, you’re running in place.

How Do You Prove a Property Damage Claim?

This is the part most articles mention but never actually explain.

Documentation wins these cases. Photos and video of the damage from every angle, taken at the scene, if you can manage it. Independent repair estimates, not just the insurer’s preferred shop number. A copy of the police report. Witness contact information if anyone saw the accident happen.

The California Department of Insurance publishes a consumer guide covering the full claim process, including your right to choose your own repair shop under Insurance Code § 758.5. Read it before you talk to any adjuster. It’s short, and it gives you a real sense of what the insurer is supposed to do versus what they actually do.

If you’ve been in a car accident in California and need help understanding your legal options, contact DK Law for a free consultation.

About the Author

Michelle Lysengen

Michelle is a content specialist at DK Law and creates content that highlights company events and breaks down complex legal topics into digestible, engaging content. She earned her B.A. in Marketing from California State University, Fullerton.

Reviewed By

Matt Taylor, Esq.

Senior Partner & Director of Litigation

Matt Taylor is a seasoned trial attorney at DK Law with 10+ years experience handling complex personal injury and premises liability cases.


Last reviewed on April 1, 2026

DK All the way

From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!

How Long After a Car Accident Can You Claim Injury in California?

HomeHow Long After a Car Accident Can You Claim Injury in California?

How Long After a Car Accident Can You Claim Injury in California?

March 31, 2026Michelle Lysengen
A split image showing a rear-end car accident with a damaged silver Toyota Camry on a residential street on the left, and an October calendar on a wooden desk with 'Insurance/Repair' circled in red on the 21st and an appointment noted for the 22nd, alongside a pen and coffee cup on the right.

Jump To

Every 4 minutes.

On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

Two years. Under California Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1, you have two years from the date of your injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. Miss that window and your case is gone. No exceptions based on merit, no judicial discretion, no second chances.

But two years is just the default. Several situations shorten that timeline dramatically, and the confusion between insurance deadlines and lawsuit deadlines trips people up constantly. You also need to file an SR-1 accident report with the DMV within 10 days if anyone was injured or property damage exceeded $1,000.

Key Takeaways

  • California gives you two years to file a personal injury lawsuit after a car accident under CCP § 335.1. The clock starts on the date of injury, not when you finish medical treatment or settle with insurance.
  • If a government entity is involved (city bus, Caltrans road defect, public transit), your deadline shrinks to six months for filing a mandatory administrative claim. Miss it, and you likely cannot sue at all.
  • Insurance claim deadlines and lawsuit deadlines are completely separate. Negotiating with an insurer does not pause the two-year statute of limitations.
  • Some injuries don’t show up right away. California’s discovery rule can extend your filing deadline if symptoms like a concussion or soft tissue damage appear days after the crash.

What Is California’s Statute of Limitations for Car Accident Injuries?

A statute of limitations is a hard deadline for filing a lawsuit. For personal injury from car accidents, that’s two years under CCP § 335.1. Some older sources still cite CCP § 340 as the governing statute. That hasn’t been accurate since 2003, when the legislature moved personal injury into its own section. Section 340 now covers defamation and false imprisonment. Not car accidents.

The two-year clock starts running on the date of your injury. Not the date you hired a lawyer. Not the date insurance denied your claim. Not the date your doctor cleared you from physical therapy. The date it happened.

Property damage runs on a separate, longer timeline of three years under CCP § 338. So if your personal injury deadline has passed, you may still have a window for vehicle damage.

What Exceptions Can Shorten or Extend the Deadline?

The two-year rule has teeth, but it also has exceptions. Some of them work in your favor. One does not.

Government entity claims. If a city vehicle, county bus, Caltrans road defect, or any public agency contributed to your accident, the timeline collapses. You must file a formal written claim with that entity within six months under Government Code § 911.2. You cannot skip this step and go straight to a lawsuit. Once filed, the agency has 45 days to respond. If they reject or stay silent, you have six months from the rejection to file suit.

Minors. Under CCP § 352, the statute of limitations is tolled (paused) while the injured person is under 18. A child hurt at age 10 has until their 20th birthday to file. One critical catch: this tolling does not apply to government claims. Even for a minor, the six-month government filing deadline still applies.

Delayed discovery. Not every injury announces itself at the scene. Soft tissue damage, concussions, and PTSD can take days or weeks to surface. California’s discovery rule, from Jolly v. Eli Lilly & Co. (1988), holds that the statute of limitations begins when the plaintiff discovers or reasonably should have discovered the injury and its connection to negligence. Once you suspect wrongdoing, the court expects you to investigate. You can’t sit on it.

How Are Insurance Deadlines Different from Lawsuit Deadlines?

This is where people get confused, and where insurance companies benefit.

The two-year statute of limitations applies to lawsuits filed in court. Insurance claims run on a completely separate track governed by your policy terms. Most policies require “prompt” notification, and the California Department of Insurance advises reporting accidents immediately. No blanket California law mandates a specific number of days.

The dangerous part: negotiating with an insurer does not pause the statute of limitations. Settlement talks can drag on for months while the clock keeps running. Some insurers use delay as a deliberate tactic, running out the clock while you wait for a fair offer that never comes.

California regulates the insurer’s side of the timeline. Under Cal. Code Regs. § 2695.7, insurers must accept or deny a claim within 40 calendar days of receiving proof. Violations of that standard can form the basis of a bad-faith claim.

What Happens If You Wait Too Long?

The court dismisses your case. There’s no weighing of circumstances, no consideration of how strong your evidence is or how badly you were hurt. An expired statute of limitations is an absolute bar. The defendant raises it as a defense, the judge grants the motion, and your right to compensation is permanently gone.

Evidence deteriorates with time, too. Witnesses forget details, surveillance footage gets overwritten, and physical evidence from the crash becomes harder to reconstruct. The longer the gap between your accident and your first doctor visit, the easier it is for the defense to argue your injuries came from something else.

If you’ve been injured in a car accident in California and aren’t sure where you stand on the timeline, contact DK Law for a free case review. Even if you think you might be close to a deadline, there may still be options.

About the Author

Michelle Lysengen

Michelle is a content specialist at DK Law and creates content that highlights company events and breaks down complex legal topics into digestible, engaging content. She earned her B.A. in Marketing from California State University, Fullerton.

Reviewed By

Matt Taylor, Esq.

Senior Partner & Director of Litigation

Matt Taylor is a seasoned trial attorney at DK Law with 10+ years experience handling complex personal injury and premises liability cases.


Last reviewed on March 31, 2026

DK All the way

From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!

Monday, March 30, 2026

Insurance Company Tactics: 12 Moves Adjusters Use to Shrink Your Claim

HomeInsurance Company Tactics: 12 Moves Adjusters Use to Shrink Your Claim

Insurance Company Tactics: 12 Moves Adjusters Use to Shrink Your Claim

March 30, 2026Michelle Lysengen
A suited insurance adjuster sits reclined in a leather office chair with feet on his desk, talking on the phone with a claim file visible on the desk, a laptop nearby, and the Los Angeles skyline visible through floor-to-ceiling windows in front of him.

Jump To

Every 4 minutes.

On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

The person calling you after your accident sounds helpful. Concerned, even. They ask how you’re feeling. They say they want to get this resolved quickly so you can move on with your life. And they mean it. They do want to resolve this quickly. Just not for the reasons you think.

Insurance adjusters are experienced professionals who handle hundreds of claims each year. Their role, by design, is to evaluate and close claims efficiently and at the lowest possible cost to their employer. That doesn’t make them bad people – it is simply how the system is structured. The faster they close your claim and the less they pay out, the better their numbers look. Understanding that single fact changes how you hear every word they say to you.

Key Takeaways

Priority
Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
Exhibit
A

Insurance adjusters are evaluated on financial performance metrics — average payout amounts, closure speed, and settling below reserved amounts. Bonuses of 10–30% of base salary can ride on those targets. Their incentives and yours are not aligned.

Exhibit
B

California’s Fair Claims Settlement Practices Regulations require insurers to acknowledge your claim within 15 days and accept or deny it within 40 days of receiving proof of loss. Violations are evidence of bad faith.

→ Missing these deadlines is legally actionable

Exhibit
C

You have the right to refuse recorded statements and blanket medical authorizations that would expose your entire health history — not just records relevant to your injury.

Exhibit
D

California Insurance Code § 790.03(h) lists 16 specific prohibited claims practices. Even a single knowing violation can trigger enforcement action. If an adjuster’s behavior feels wrong, there may be a statute that says it is.

→ Document every interaction — dates, names, what was said

Why Do Adjusters Use These Tactics? The Business Model Behind the Behavior

Claims departments run on metrics. Average paid claim amounts, claim severity ratios, closure rates, and reserves management. In a 2024 federal case, Barten v. State Farm, an Arizona court compelled State Farm to disclose internal documents about adjuster financial goals and incentive structures, ruling that this information was discoverable in bad faith litigation because it directly impacts how policyholders get treated.

Industry commentators have noted that performance bonuses rewarding adjusters for paying claims fully and promptly are largely absent from most incentive plans. What does get rewarded: settling below the reserved amount, closing files quickly, and avoiding litigation. None of these metrics measures whether you received fair compensation.

This matters because every tactic below flows from this reality. The adjuster isn’t freelancing. They’re following a playbook designed to protect the company’s bottom line.

Tactic #1: They Call Within 48 Hours Asking for a Recorded Statement?

You’re still in a hospital gown. Or sitting in a pharmacy parking lot, filling a pain prescription. The adjuster calls, voice warm and reassuring, and asks if you’d mind giving a quick recorded statement about what happened.

This is not routine. You are under no legal obligation to provide a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurance company during the claims process. They want to catch you while you’re medicated, exhausted, and still processing what happened. “I’m feeling okay today” becomes evidence six months later that your injuries weren’t severe. A vague description of the accident (because you can’t think straight on Vicodin) becomes a locked-in version they’ll use to challenge anything you remember more clearly later.

Tactic #2: The Lowball “Final Offer”

Within weeks of your accident, before you’ve finished physical therapy, before you know whether you’ll need surgery, an offer appears. It sounds like a lot of money when you’re staring at a pile of bills. The adjuster may call it their “best and final offer” or say their authority is limited.

It’s rarely final. Adjusters typically have settlement authority ranges, not fixed amounts, and claim files often include reserves exceeding the initial offer. The urgency is manufactured. They know that once you finish treatment and understand the full scope of your injuries, your claim is worth significantly more.

Tactic #3: Spying on You

Insurance companies hire private investigators. They review your social media accounts. They drive through your neighborhood. They may sit outside your home in an unmarked car and film you taking out the trash or playing with your dog in the front yard.

Under California Civil Code § 1708.8, insurers need an “articulable suspicion” that a claim might be fraudulent before deploying video surveillance. They can observe you in public spaces. They cannot trespass on private property, record audio without consent, or engage in harassment. If you suspect you’re being followed or watched, document it. Dates, times, vehicle descriptions.

Tactic #4: Endless Documentation Loop

You submit your medical records. They ask for more. You send those. They need them in a different format, or from a different date range, or from a provider you saw once three years ago. Every request comes with a polite apology and a two-week turnaround.

This is attrition. California’s two-year statute of limitations for personal injury is ticking the entire time. The regulations say insurers cannot “persist in seeking information not reasonably required for or material to the resolution of a claim dispute.” But proving what’s “reasonably required” is where the gray area lives.

Tactic #5: The “Independent” Medical Examination?

The insurance company asks you to see their doctor for an “independent” evaluation. The doctor is selected by the insurer, paid by the insurer (often $1,000 to $5,000+ per exam), and may see dozens of claimants per week for that same insurer.

IME doctors who consistently find that injuries are less severe than treating physicians believe tend to stay on the roster. Doctors who agree with your treating physician’s assessment tend not to get called back. The examination itself is often brief, sometimes 15-20 minutes for injuries that your own doctor spent months evaluating. If you’re asked to attend an IME during the pre-litigation claims process, know that you can bring a witness, record the exam, and request a copy of the report.

Tactic #6: The Friendly Adjuster

Adjusters receive training in rapport-building. The friendly tone, the personal questions, the “I’m on your side” energy. It serves a purpose. Casual conversation gets documented. When you mention you went to your kid’s soccer game last weekend, that goes in the file as evidence you’re physically active. When you say you’re feeling “a little better,” it becomes proof that your injuries are resolving.

They’re also monitoring your social media. A photo of you smiling at a family barbecue. A check-in at a bowling alley. Activity on a fitness app. All of it gets pulled into the claim file and used against you at the negotiating table.

Tactic #7: Using Pre-Existing Conditions Against You

If you’ve ever had back pain, a prior car accident, or any kind of chronic condition, expect the adjuster to argue your current injuries are really just old problems resurfacing. They’ll pull medical records going back years, looking for anything they can pin your symptoms on.

California law is clear on this. Under CACI jury instructions No. 3927 and 3928, a defendant must take you as they find you. If a pre-existing condition was manageable before the accident and debilitating after it, the person who caused the accident owes you for the aggravation. The legal term is the “eggshell plaintiff” doctrine, and it means your medical history doesn’t let the at-fault party off the hook.

Tactic #8: They Inflate Your Share of Fault

California uses a pure comparative negligence system established by Li v. Yellow Cab Co. in 1975. You can recover damages even if you were partially at fault, but your award gets reduced by your fault percentage.

Adjusters exploit this aggressively. If they can bump your fault from 10% to 30%, that’s a 20% reduction in what they pay. Common arguments: you were on your phone, you didn’t brake fast enough, you weren’t wearing a seatbelt, you waited too long to see a doctor. Some of these arguments are legitimate. Many are inflated specifically because most unrepresented claimants don’t know they can push back.

Tactic #9: The “Scope of Authority” Lie

“I wish I could offer more, but I’ve reached the limit of my authority.” This is a negotiation tactic. Adjusters do operate within authority levels that require supervisory approval above certain thresholds. But the threshold is often well above what they’re offering you. The claim of limited authority creates an artificial ceiling that discourages you from negotiating further.

Tactic #10: They Make You Sign a Blanket Medical Authorization

The adjuster sends you a form and asks you to sign it so they can “get your medical records and move things along.” The form authorizes access to your complete medical history from every provider you’ve ever seen. Psychiatric records. Substance abuse treatment. Reproductive health. Conditions that have zero connection to your car accident.

Under the HIPAA Privacy Rule’s minimum necessary standard, covered entities should only request the minimum PHI needed for a specific purpose. But when you sign a broad authorization, disclosures made under that authorization become exempt from the minimum necessary requirement. That’s why the scope of what you sign matters so much. Limit authorizations to treatment related to your injury, from specific providers, for a defined time period.

Tactic #11: Statute of Limitations Trick

California gives you two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. The insurance company knows this deadline. You might not. And they will never remind you.

In fact, the Fair Claims Settlement Practices Regulations require insurers to notify unrepresented claimants of applicable deadlines at least 60 days before expiration. But that notice might arrive as a form letter that gets lost in a stack of medical bills. Meanwhile, the documentation loop from Tactic #3 keeps churning, eating months off your clock.

Tactic #12: Settlement Release Language Fine Print

When you finally reach a settlement number, the release you’re asked to sign typically contains language waiving all future claims related to the incident. Including injuries that haven’t shown up yet.

Traumatic brain injuries can take months to fully manifest. Internal soft tissue damage sometimes worsens over time. If you sign a release with broad waiver language and develop complications six months later, you generally cannot reopen the settlement. The finality of that document is something most people don’t fully appreciate until it’s too late.

When Do These Tactics Cross Into Bad Faith Territory?

Not every frustrating experience with an adjuster is illegal. Insurance companies have a right to investigate claims, request documentation, and negotiate settlements. The line gets crossed when these practices violate California Insurance Code § 790.03(h), which enumerates 16 specific prohibited unfair claims settlement practices.

A few that map directly to the tactics above:

  • Misrepresenting policy provisions or pertinent facts to claimants
  • Failing to acknowledge and act promptly on communications
  • Not attempting in good faith to effectuate fair settlements when liability is reasonably clear
  • Compelling claimants to file lawsuits by offering substantially less than what a court would later award
  • Failing to provide a reasonable explanation for denying a claim or offering a low settlement

A single knowing violation can trigger enforcement by the California Department of Insurance. If you believe an insurer is engaging in unfair practices, you can file a complaint with the CDI online or by calling 1-800-927-HELP. The CDI investigates complaints, contacts the insurer, and can order them to reconsider improperly denied claims. It won’t award you damages directly, but it creates an official record of the insurer’s conduct, and that record matters if the claim escalates to litigation.


If any of these tactics sound familiar, you may need more than a web article. Contact DK Law for a free consultation. Our attorneys have spent years on both sides of personal injury claims, and we know how to counter every move on this list.

About the Author

Michelle Lysengen

Michelle is a content specialist at DK Law and creates content that highlights company events and breaks down complex legal topics into digestible, engaging content. She earned her B.A. in Marketing from California State University, Fullerton.

DK All the way

From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!

What Is a Lien Holdback in a Settlement? 

HomeWhat Is a Lien Holdback in a Settlement? 

What Is a Lien Holdback in a Settlement? 

Reading Time: 4 Minutes

March 30, 2026Elvis Goren
A pie chart made of $100 bills with a slice separated to illustrate the concept of a lien holdback, representing a portion of a personal injury settlement set aside to cover outstanding medical liens.

Jump To

Every 4 minutes.

On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

You settled your personal injury case. Months of waiting, and you finally got the number you agreed to. Then your attorney tells you they can’t release all of it. A chunk of your settlement is being “held back,” and you won’t see that money for weeks, maybe months. It feels wrong. Maybe even suspicious. But a lien holdback is one of the most important protections in the settlement process, and understanding it will save you a lot of anxiety.

Key Takeaways

Priority
Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
Exhibit
A

A lien holdback is money your attorney sets aside from your settlement to pay medical providers, health insurers, Medicare, or other third parties with a legal right to reimbursement. You receive what remains once those claims are negotiated and paid.

Exhibit
B

Your holdback funds are held in a regulated client trust account — kept strictly separate from firm operating funds. California’s Rules of Professional Conduct (Rule 1.15) mandate this separation.

→ Your money stays yours until liens are resolved

Exhibit
C

Lien negotiation routinely saves clients thousands. California law caps certain health plan liens at one-third of the settlement, and experienced attorneys regularly negotiate private medical liens down 25% to 50%.

Exhibit
D

Medicare liens take the longest to resolve — sometimes six months or more — because the federal government holds automatic recovery rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b) and sets its own timeline.

→ Factor Medicare resolution time into your settlement expectations

Why Does Your Attorney Hold Back Part of Your Settlement?

When someone else’s insurance pays your claim, that money doesn’t go straight into your bank account. It goes into your attorney’s trust account first because there are people in line ahead of you. Hospitals that treated you on a lien basis. Your health insurer, which paid the bills and now wants reimbursement (a process called subrogation). Medicare or Medi-Cal, if they covered any treatment.

Your attorney is legally required to pay these claims before handing you the balance. Skip this step, and they face State Bar discipline, malpractice liability, and, in the case of Medicare, potential double damages. The holdback makes sure enough money is set aside to cover every valid lien while negotiations play out.

What Does a Real Settlement Breakdown Look Like?

Numbers help here more than explanations. Say your case settles for $100,000.

  • Attorney fees (33%): $33,000
  • Litigation costs: $2,500
  • Lien holdback: $20,000
  • Your initial check: $44,500

That $20,000 sits in trust while your attorney contacts every lienholder and negotiates. If they reduce total liens from $20,000 to $14,000, you get a second check for $6,000. Net recovery: $50,500.

The 33% fee is standard for California pre-litigation settlements, bumping to 40% if a lawsuit gets filed.BPC § 6147 requires these agreements in writing, and the percentage is negotiable.

What Types of Liens Can Come Out of Your Settlement?

Not all liens work the same way, and the type of lien determines how much negotiating room exists.

  • Hospital liens (Civil Code §§ 3045.1-3045.6): Capped at 50% of your net settlement after attorney fees. The hospital must file a proper notice for the lien to be valid.
  • Health insurance subrogation (Civil Code § 3040): Your HMO or PPO can claim reimbursement, but California caps recovery at one-third of the settlement when you have an attorney. Common fund and comparative fault reductions shrink it further.
  • Medicare conditional payments: Medicare pays your bills “conditionally” and expects that money back from any settlement. The CMS recovery process gives you 60 days to pay after the final demand letter. Miss that window and interest starts accruing.
  • ERISA health plan liens: If your employer’s self-funded health plan paid your medical bills, federal ERISA law can override California’s protective caps. The plan document controls.
  • Medi-Cal and workers’ comp liens: Both carry statutory recovery rights, though California courts have established formulas that often reduce these amounts significantly.

How Does the Two-Check Process Work?

Most personal injury firms use a split disbursement approach. Two checks instead of one.

The first comes shortly after the settlement clears. Your attorney deducts fees, subtracts costs, sets aside the lien reserve, and sends you the rest. Usually within a week or two.

The second check arrives after all liens are resolved. Private medical liens often wrap up in weeks. Medicare is a different story. CMS processing can take three to six months, and disputed claims drag out longer. Your attorney should be providing periodic updates and a written accounting showing what’s in the holdback and where negotiations stand.

Are Your Settlement Holdback Funds Protected?

Yes. California attorneys must hold client funds in IOLTA trust accounts that are completely separate from the firm’s operating money. Rule 1.15 requires notification within 14 days of receiving funds and creates a presumption of violation if undisputed funds aren’t distributed within 45 days.

If you believe your attorney is mishandling settlement funds, the California State Bar accepts complaints online. You also have the right to request a written accounting of your holdback at any time.

What Should You Ask Your Attorney About Your Holdback?

Three questions worth asking before you sign the settlement statement:

  1. What’s the estimated holdback amount and what liens does it cover?
  2. How long do you expect lien resolution to take?
  3. Can I get a written accounting while we wait?

A good attorney won’t hesitate on any of these. At DK Law, we believe every client deserves a clear, honest accounting of their settlement from start to finish. Reach out today for a free consultation.

About the Author

Elvis Goren

Elvis Goren is the Organic Growth Manager at DK Law, bringing over a decade of content and SEO expertise from Silicon Valley startups to the legal industry. He champions a human-first approach to legal content, crafting fun and engaging resources that make complex injury law topics resonate with everyday readers while driving meaningful organic growth.

DK All the way

From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

How to File a Slip and Fall Claim in California (2026)

HomeHow to File a Slip and Fall Claim in California (2026)

How to File a Slip and Fall Claim in California in 2026

March 23, 2026Elvis Goren
Slip and fall case documentation laid out on a wooden surface, featuring a store incident report dated 03/15/2024, personal injury notes referencing a wet floor accident, a business card for Attorney Daniel Kim, and a phone showing a wet floor caution sign.

Jump To

Every 4 minutes.

On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

Falls send over 8 million people to emergency rooms every year in the United States. Not just elderly people losing their balance. Working adults slipping on unmarked wet floors in grocery stores, tripping over broken pavement outside restaurants, or falling down poorly lit stairwells in apartment buildings. A hip fracture alone can run $35,000 or more in first-year medical costs, and over 60% of people hospitalized for fall injuries end up in skilled nursing facilities instead of going home.

If you fell on someone else’s property because of a hazard they should have fixed, California law gives you the right to file a claim. But the process has traps that can quietly destroy your case if you don’t know they exist. Surveillance footage gets deleted. Evidence of how long a spill sat on the floor disappears. Insurance adjusters start building their defense before you’ve even finished your first doctor visit.

Here’s how to protect yourself.

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

Priority
Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
Exhibit
A

California property owners have a legal duty of ordinary care to keep their premises safe under Civil Code § 1714. If they knew about a hazard (or should have known) and did nothing, they’re liable.

Exhibit
B

Most businesses keep surveillance footage for only 7 to 30 days before it’s automatically overwritten. Getting a preservation letter sent quickly is one of the most important early steps in a slip and fall case.

→ Delay = destroyed evidence. Act immediately.

Exhibit
C

You have two years to file a lawsuit against private property owners. But if you fell on government property — a sidewalk, public building, or transit station — you must file an administrative claim within six months.

→ Government property deadline: 6 months, not 2 years

Exhibit
D

California follows pure comparative negligence. Even if you were partially at fault for your fall, you can still recover damages — just reduced by your share of the blame.

What Makes a Valid Slip and Fall Claim in California?

Not every fall on someone else’s property is a legal case. You need to prove four things under California’s premises liability jury instructions

  • The defendant owned, leased, or controlled the property
  • They were negligent in maintaining it
  • You were harmed 
  • And their negligence was a substantial factor in causing your injuries.

The word that matters most in that list is negligence. A store isn’t automatically liable because you fell. You have to show they either knew about the dangerous condition and failed to address it, or that the hazard existed long enough that any reasonable business would have found it during routine inspections.

This is called the “notice” requirement, and it’s where most slip and fall claims are actually won or lost.

How Does “Notice” Decide Your Slip and Fall Case?

Say you slip on a puddle of milk in a grocery store aisle. The store’s defense will almost certainly be: we didn’t know about it. The question then becomes whether they should have known.

California courts look at two types of notice. Actual notice means someone at the business saw the hazard, received a complaint, or created the condition themselves. An employee mopped without a wet floor sign. A manager who received a report about a broken handrail and never fixed it. That’s actual notice.

Constructive notice is trickier and more common. It means the hazard was there long enough that a reasonably careful property owner would have discovered it through normal inspections. The California Supreme Court addressed this directly in Ortega v. Kmart, holding that there are no exact time limitations for how long a hazard must exist. It’s a factual question. But the evidence matters enormously. 

Dirty footprints tracked through a spill suggest it’s been there a while. Dried edges on a puddle. Cart wheel marks through liquid on the floor. A sticky residue versus a fresh wet spot. These physical details tell a story about time, and time is what establishes constructive notice.

On the flip side, a 2024 California appellate decision (Gonzalez v. Interstate Cleaning Corp.) found that a shopping center wasn’t liable when its janitorial crew had inspected the area just 8 to 9 minutes before the fall. The hazard was too fresh for constructive notice to apply.

What this means practically: the store’s inspection records become critical evidence. A grocery store that can document inspections every 30 minutes is in a much stronger position than one that can’t produce any cleaning logs at all.

What Should You Do Immediately After a Slip and Fall?

The first 48 hours after a fall matter more than most people realize. Not because of legal deadlines, but because evidence is actively disappearing.

  • Report the incident to the property owner or manager. Ask them to fill out an incident report. Get the report number and the manager’s name. Here’s something most people don’t know: the store keeps the original report, and you don’t automatically get a copy. Take your own notes while the details are fresh. And be careful what you say during this conversation. Some managers are trained to ask questions that shift blame. “Were you on your phone?” or “Did you see the sign?” Stick to the facts of what happened. Don’t speculate about what caused the fall.
  • Get medical attention, even if you feel okay. Adrenaline masks pain. Some fall injuries, particularly soft tissue damage, concussions, and spinal compression, don’t present symptoms for days. If you skip the doctor and symptoms show up a week later, insurance will argue the injury isn’t connected to the fall. A medical record from the day of the accident closes that argument.
  • Document the scene aggressively. Photos and video of the exact spot where you fell. The hazard itself (spill, broken surface, debris, poor lighting). Wide shots showing the surrounding area and any lack of warning signs. Your shoes and clothing. Injuries as they appear. Get contact information from anyone who witnessed the fall before they leave.

Why Does Surveillance Footage Disappear So Fast?

This is one of the biggest hidden risks in slip and fall cases. Most retail stores keep security camera footage for 7 to 14 days. Chain restaurants might hold it for 30 days. After that, they can automatically overwrite it. The objective video record of your fall, the evidence that could show exactly what the hazard looked like, how long it was there, and whether any employees walked past it, just stops existing.

By the time many people finish their initial medical treatment, the footage is already gone.

One of the first things a personal injury attorney does in a slip and fall case is send a spoliation letter (also called a preservation letter) to the business. This is a formal legal notice requiring them to retain all surveillance footage, incident reports, maintenance logs, and cleaning schedules related to the accident. If the business deletes evidence after receiving this letter, courts can impose sanctions, including instructing the jury to assume the destroyed footage would have supported your claim.

This is a concrete, non-abstract reason to talk to an attorney quickly, even if you’re not sure whether you want to file a claim yet.

What Happens If You Fell on Government Property?

Different rules now. If your fall happened on a public sidewalk, in a government building, at a transit station, on school grounds, or in a public park, you can’t just file a lawsuit. California’s Tort Claims Act requires you to submit an administrative claim to the responsible government entity within six months of the accident. Miss this window, and your case is almost certainly dead, no matter how strong the evidence.

The substantive standard is different, too. Under Government Code § 835, you must prove the property had a “dangerous condition,” that the condition caused your injury, and that either a government employee’s negligence created the hazard or the entity had notice of it. 

Government entities also have a unique defense: they can argue that even if the condition was dangerous, their response (or failure to respond) was “reasonable” given their resources and the time they had to act. Private property owners don’t get this defense.

Should You Handle the Claim Yourself or Hire a Lawyer?

Depends on the situation. For a minor injury where fault is obvious, medical bills are low, and the property owner’s insurance is cooperating, you might be able to negotiate a reasonable settlement on your own. You’d send a demand letter to the insurer detailing the incident, your medical costs, lost wages, and a dollar amount for pain and suffering. Then negotiate from there.

The reality check: insurance adjusters negotiate claims for a living. They know that unrepresented claimants are statistically more likely to accept early lowball offers. They also know that without an attorney, the implicit threat of a lawsuit carries less weight because the claimant would need to find, hire, and pay a lawyer to actually file one.

When should you seriously consider hiring an attorney? When the property owner disputes what happened. When your injuries require ongoing treatment. When you fall on government property and face the six-month claim deadline. When the insurer is delaying, denying, or offering a fraction of your medical bills. When the liability question is complicated, like shared fault or a missing surveillance video.

An attorney handles the evidence preservation, insurance negotiations, and, if necessary, litigation. Most personal injury attorneys work on contingency, meaning no fees unless you recover.

Common Mistakes That Destroy Slip and Fall Claims

  • Giving a recorded statement to the insurance adjuster without legal advice. They’ll call quickly, sound friendly, and ask questions designed to get you to minimize your injuries or admit partial fault. You’re not obligated to give a recorded statement. Politely decline until you’ve spoken with a lawyer.
  • Waiting too long to act. Not because of the statute of limitations (though that matters too), but because surveillance footage gets deleted, witnesses forget details, and the physical evidence of the hazard gets cleaned up.
  • Posting about the incident on social media. A post saying “took a hard fall at the store today, but I’m tough, I’ll be fine” directly undermines a later injury claim. Adjusters check social media.
  • Accepting a quick settlement before understanding the full extent of your injuries. Some injuries from falls, particularly back and neck problems, worsen over weeks or months. Once you accept a settlement and sign a release, you can’t go back for more.

FAQ: California Slip and Fall Claims

How long do I have to file a slip and fall claim in California? Two years for private property under CCP § 335.1. Six months for government property claims. But the practical deadline is much shorter because of the disappearing evidence.

What if I was partially at fault for my fall? California’s pure comparative negligence rule means you can still recover. If you were 30% at fault, your compensation is reduced by 30%. You’re not barred from filing.

How do I prove the property owner was negligent? Evidence that the hazard existed and the owner knew or should have known about it. Inspection logs, surveillance footage, witness statements, photos of the condition, and incident reports all build this case.

Do I need a lawyer for a slip and fall claim? Not always. But if injuries are significant, liability is disputed, footage has been deleted, or you fell on government property, legal representation substantially changes the outcome.

If your fall caused serious injuries and the insurance process isn’t going smoothly, DK Law handles slip and fall claims across 13+ California locations. Free consultations, no fees unless we recover for you. We’ll tell you honestly whether your case needs a lawyer or whether you can handle it yourself.

About the Author

Elvis Goren

Elvis Goren is the Organic Growth Manager at DK Law, bringing over a decade of content and SEO expertise from Silicon Valley startups to the legal industry. He champions a human-first approach to legal content, crafting fun and engaging resources that make complex injury law topics resonate with everyday readers while driving meaningful organic growth.

DK All the way

From Your Case to Compensation, we take your case all the way.

Schedule a Free Consultation

Get Expert Legal Advice at Zero Cost.

At DK Law we’re with you – all the way.

Get a Free Consultation with our experts today!