Friday, May 15, 2026

What Not to Say to a Personal Injury Lawyer?

HomeWhat Not to Say to a Personal Injury Lawyer?

What Not to Say to a Personal Injury Lawyer? NOTHING

Reading Time: 13 Minutes

May 15, 2026Elvis Goren
A attorney in a navy suit gestures while speaking to a client across a desk stacked with case files and legal documents, with a coffee mug and law books visible in the background.

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    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 answer is genuinely nothing.

    That sounds like a trick, and online it usually is. Most articles on this topic give you a list of phrases to avoid, treating the lawyer like a hostile party you have to outsmart. They’ve quietly merged two completely different conversations: the one with the insurance adjuster, who is trying to pay you less, and the one with your own lawyer, who can’t do the job unless they know everything.

    The right list of things not to say does exist. It’s just for the other people in your post-accident orbit: the at-fault driver, their adjuster, your own insurance rep, coworkers, social media followers, the friend whose cousin is a paralegal. To everyone on that list, you say very little. To your lawyer, you say everything.

    Key Takeaways

    Priority
    Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
    Exhibit
    A

    California’s attorney-client privilege protects everything you tell a personal injury lawyer — even at the initial consultation, before you’ve signed anything.

    Exhibit
    B

    The things people fear saying to a lawyer — prior injuries, embarrassing details, treatment gaps — are exactly the things the lawyer needs to build the case.

    Exhibit
    C

    The actual “what not to say” rules apply to insurance adjusters, the other driver, social media, and coworkers — not to your own attorney.

    Exhibit
    D

    California’s pure comparative fault system means a single careless statement to an adjuster can shift fault percentages and cut your recovery proportionally.

    → One sentence to an adjuster can cost you thousands

    Exhibit
    E

    Disclosing Medi-Cal coverage early is essential. Failure to do so can collapse a settlement at disbursement.

    → Hide a Medi-Cal lien and the whole deal can unravel

    Why Your Lawyer Is the One Person Who Needs the Whole Truth

    California’s attorney-client privilege is one of the strongest confidentiality protections in American law, and it kicks in at hello. Under Evidence Code § 951, a “client” includes anyone who consults a lawyer for the purpose of retaining them or getting legal advice. The privilege attaches at the first consultation, even if you decide not to hire that lawyer, even if no money changes hands. The ABA’s Model Rule 1.18, which California parallels, says the same: “even when no client-lawyer relationship ensues,” the lawyer can’t use or reveal what you told them.

    In practice, anything you say to a personal injury lawyer in a consultation stays between you and that lawyer. Not the insurance company. Not opposing counsel. Not a judge.

    Walk into the consultation the way you’d walk into a surgeon’s office: prepared to share the full picture. The old injury nobody knew about. The beer at lunch. The phone in your hand. A lawyer working with the full picture can build a case around the difficult facts. A lawyer who learns about them from opposing counsel three months in cannot.

    What Not to Say to Everyone Else (That’s the Real Danger)

    The actual “what not to say” rules apply to everyone outside your lawyer’s office, and they get less attention than they deserve.

    Insurance adjusters and California’s comparative fault rule

    The adjuster who calls you in the first week after an accident is not your friend, however nice they are on the phone. Their job is to close your claim for as little as possible.

    California follows pure comparative fault, established by the California Supreme Court in Li v. Yellow Cab Co. in 1975. You can recover damages even if you’re 99% at fault. But your recovery gets reduced by your fault percentage. On a $500,000 case, a 10% shift in fault costs you $50,000.

    Adjusters know how this math works, and a recorded statement is where they engineer the fault shift. A throwaway “I guess I should have been watching more carefully” is enough to give them a percentage to argue for. Don’t give recorded statements without your lawyer present. Don’t speculate about what the other driver was doing. Don’t apologize.

    Social media and the discovery process

    What you post on social media after an accident can affect your claim. In California, posts are discoverable in civil litigation, even if your account is set to private.

    California’s discovery statute is intentionally broad: any party can obtain discovery of any non-privileged matter relevant to the case or reasonably calculated to lead to admissible evidence. That includes Facebook timelines, Instagram stories, TikTok videos, Strava activity, and the public side of dating profiles. Privacy settings are not a shield. Courts have repeatedly held that “private” posts can be subpoenaed when the request is properly tailored.

    The rules during a pending case: don’t post about the accident, don’t post about your injuries, don’t post about feeling better or worse, don’t post photos of yourself doing physical activity, and don’t delete anything that already exists. Deleting can constitute spoliation of evidence and create a separate legal problem on top of whatever was in the post.

    The Things California Victims Hold Back

    Three categories of information are withheld most often in California consultations. All three almost always backfire.

    Prior injuries and the eggshell plaintiff rule

    The most common omission is a prior injury, especially to the same body part affected by the accident. The fear: that disclosing a prior back injury kills the claim because the defense will pin everything on the old condition.

    The fear is backward. California’s eggshell plaintiff rule, captured in CACI No. 3927, holds that the defendant takes the plaintiff as they find them. If your back was stable for the past five years and the accident made it unstable, the worsening is fully on the at-fault driver, even though the condition predated the crash. Hiding the prior injury hands the defense a credibility weapon at deposition. Disclosing it early, with medical records to prove the baseline, often increases the value of the aggravation claim.

    Gaps in treatment

    A three-week gap between physical therapy appointments is the second-most common case-killer. Defense lawyers treat extended gaps as evidence that the injury wasn’t serious, that the plaintiff recovered, or that the symptoms weren’t really there.

    The gap usually has a real explanation. Insurance denied a referral. The pain briefly went away and came back. A child got sick, and appointments fell through. Your lawyer needs the actual reason so they can document it before opposing counsel builds a narrative around the empty calendar.

    Medi-Cal, Medicare, and other coverage

    If you’re on Medi-Cal and don’t tell your lawyer, the settlement can collapse at disbursement. California’s Department of Health Care Services has a statutory right to recover the cost of accident-related care from any third-party settlement under Welfare and Institutions Code § 14124.76. 

    Significant statutory reductions are available, including an automatic 25% reduction for attorney’s fees and a cap limiting recovery to the portion of the settlement representing past medical expenses. But your lawyer can’t negotiate those reductions if they don’t know the lien exists.

    The same applies to Medicare, TRICARE, VA coverage, and employer-sponsored health plans. Tell the lawyer everything that paid for your treatment. They’ll handle the lien side.

    What Should You Actually Say to Your Lawyer? Everything.

    Show up to the consultation prepared to tell the lawyer everything that happened, in order, including the parts that make you look bad. Bring a written timeline if you have one: when the accident happened, where you went after, who you spoke to, what symptoms appeared when, and what medications you’ve taken. Bring photos. Sign medical records authorizations or bring the records themselves. List every prior injury you can remember, even the ones that seem irrelevant. List every health insurance program you’ve used in the last decade.

    The lawyer’s job is to take the full picture and build the strongest version of your case from it. Withholding information doesn’t protect you. It guarantees that whatever you held back will surface at the worst possible moment, with no time left to fix it.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How hard is it to win a personal injury lawsuit in California? 

    Most California PI cases settle before trial; very few go to verdict. The harder question is how high the settlement comes in, which depends almost entirely on documentation, liability clarity, and whether the plaintiff damaged their own case through statements to adjusters or social media posts.

    What do insurance companies not want you to know? 

    That the first offer is almost always low, that recorded statements are used to engineer fault shifts under comparative fault rules, and that anything you post on social media is fair game in discovery. The adjuster’s leverage drops significantly once you’re represented.

    What’s a sign of a good settlement offer? 

    An offer that covers your full medical bills, lost income, and a multiplier for non-economic damages that reflects the severity and permanence of the injury. Any offer that asks you to sign before reviewing your complete medical records should be treated with caution.

    Talk to a California Personal Injury Attorney

    DK Law represents California personal injury victims across more than a dozen locations statewide. Free consultations are confidential under California’s attorney-client privilege, whether or not you decide to hire us afterward.

    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!

    Should I Get a Personal Injury Lawyer After a Car Accident?

    HomeShould I Get a Personal Injury Lawyer After a Car Accident?

    Should I Get a Personal Injury Lawyer After a Car Accident? Not Always.

    May 15, 2026Michelle Lysengen
    A person standing with their back to the camera holding a smartphone while assessing rear-end damage on a gold sedan in a parking lot, with other vehicles visible in the background.

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      Every 4 minutes.

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

      Hiring a personal injury lawyer after a car accident makes financial sense in some situations and is actively bad math in others. The situation you’re in depends on a handful of facts that have nothing to do with what any law firm wants you to do.

      The financial structure of personal injury work is straightforward. Most lawyers work on contingency, taking a percentage of whatever they recover for you. That percentage typically runs from 33% before a lawsuit is filed up to 40% if the case requires litigation. The math from there is simple: if hiring a lawyer increases your recovery by enough to cover their cut and then some, it’s a clear win. If it doesn’t, you walked away with less than you would have had on your own.

      Key Takeaways

      Priority
      Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
      Exhibit
      A

      Hiring a personal injury lawyer makes financial sense in cases involving significant injuries, disputed liability, commercial defendants, or complex medical liens. It often doesn’t pencil out for minor property damage or low-impact crashes against minimum-coverage drivers.

      Exhibit
      B

      A competent firm will actually turn down cases where representation would cost the client more than it returns. A firm that takes every case that walks in the door is a warning sign — about the firm, not a feature.

      → A firm that says yes to everything is a red flag

      Exhibit
      C

      The standard contingency fee runs 33% pre-litigation to 40% post-filing. Fees are sometimes negotiable — especially on clear-liability cases with strong damages.

      → Fees aren’t always fixed — it doesn’t hurt to ask

      Exhibit
      D

      In no-fault states like New York, the architecture is different: you can only sue for pain and suffering if your injury meets the state’s “serious injury” threshold.

      Exhibit
      E

      In California, pure comparative fault and recently raised minimum insurance limits both change how settlement value gets calculated.

      The Short Answer (It Depends on Five Things)

      Five factors move this decision. Once you have them in mind, the rest is detail.

      1. Injury severity. Bruises and a sore neck for a week, or surgery, ongoing treatment, and a permanent change in how your body works?
      2. Liability clarity. Fault obvious, like a rear-end at a stoplight, or murky, like an intersection accident with conflicting witness statements?
      3. Insurance coverage available. Does the at-fault driver carry minimum limits, or are they backed by a commercial policy with seven-figure coverage?
      4. Whether liens are in play. Medicare, Medi-Cal, self-funded ERISA health plans, and hospital liens all have statutory rights to claw back medical costs from your settlement. Negotiating them is technical work most claimants can’t do alone.
      5. Your own time and capacity. Can you organize medical records, write a demand letter, negotiate with an adjuster, and stay disciplined about not damaging your case on social media?

      A “yes” on injury severity or liens almost always tips the answer toward hiring a lawyer. A “no” on all five tips it toward handling the claim yourself.

      When a Good Lawyer Will Turn You Away

      The personal injury industry has two kinds of firms. The first vets cases carefully and tells some prospects “this isn’t worth hiring representation for, here’s what to do instead.” The second takes anything that walks through the door and counts on volume.

      We’ve seen the scenario where someone walks away from an $8,000 settlement with less than half of it after the lawyer’s cut. That’s the second kind of firm. A competent attorney would have looked at that case and said no.

      Here are the cases where a real firm will, or should, decline to represent you.

      Pure property damage with no injury. Your car got hit in a parking lot, the bumper is wrecked, nobody is hurt. This is a property damage claim, handled directly with the at-fault driver’s insurer or through your own collision coverage. A personal injury lawyer adds nothing.

      Minor soft-tissue injury, clear liability, and a state-minimum policy. You were rear-ended at low speed by a driver carrying state-minimum coverage. Your medical bills come to $2,500 and you’re fully recovered in three weeks. The at-fault insurer is likely to pay close to policy limits on a clear-liability case at this scale, and a third of that going to attorney fees may leave you worse off than handling the demand letter yourself.

      You’re clearly at fault and there’s no third party. A car accident lawyer needs a defendant to pursue. If you ran a red light and crashed into a pole, there’s no case.

      You already received a fair settlement offer. If the insurer offered policy limits up front and you have no aggravating factors (no future surgery looming, no permanent impairment, no lien complications), a lawyer can’t usually get more out of coverage that’s already maxed.

      A consultation with a personal injury firm should be free and pressure-free. The right firm will walk you through the numbers honestly — including the scenarios where hiring a lawyer may not be in your best interest.

      When You Almost Certainly Need a Personal Injury Lawyer

      Certain facts pull the answer toward representation hard. Most of them involve dollar amounts where a lawyer’s percentage is comfortably outweighed by what they recover.

      Surgery, fracture, or permanent impairment. Any injury that requires surgery, results in a fracture, or causes a permanent change in your body’s function dramatically raises the value of the case. Insurers fight harder when settlements get bigger. A lawyer levels that fight.

      Ongoing or future medical treatment. If you’ll need physical therapy for the next year, future imaging, or eventual revision surgery, calculating the full value of your case requires medical opinion and economic projection. Adjusters routinely lowball cases by treating them as if treatment ended on the day of the offer.

      Disputed liability. When the other driver claims you caused the accident, or when an insurer assigns you a percentage of fault, the case shifts from a paper exercise to an evidentiary fight. Witnesses, dashcam footage, accident reconstruction, and physical evidence all become essential, and an unrepresented claimant rarely has the time or expertise to develop them.

      Commercial defendant. A crash with a delivery truck, rideshare driver, or any vehicle owned by a business changes the posture of the case. Commercial policies carry far higher limits, often $1 million or more, and the at-fault company’s insurer will have a defense lawyer involved from day one.

      Significant lien exposure. Medicare, Medi-Cal, military and VA care, ERISA self-funded plans, and California hospital liens all have statutory rights to recover from your settlement. The reduction frameworks for these liens are technical and often dispositive. A $100,000 settlement can net the client $20,000 or $50,000 depending entirely on how the liens are negotiated.

      Long-term lost income. If the accident affects your ability to work for weeks, months, or permanently, you need expert testimony to project future earning capacity. This is rarely something a claimant can do on their own.

      Wrongful death. When someone died in the accident, the case becomes a wrongful death claim, and the families pursuing it usually have neither the bandwidth nor the legal expertise to litigate it themselves. Hire a lawyer.

      The Math on a Typical Settlement

      Numbers make this concrete. Here’s how an $80,000 third-party settlement on a moderate auto-injury case actually breaks down for the client.

      The case: rear-end collision, clear liability, herniated disc requiring epidural injections, three months of physical therapy, no surgery. The at-fault driver carried a $100,000 policy. The case settled before a lawsuit was filed.

      Line itemAmount
      Gross settlement$80,000
      Attorney fee (33⅓% pre-litigation contingency)−$26,667
      Case costs (records, filing fees, expert review)−$3,000
      Health insurance lien (after Common Fund reduction)−$10,000
      Outstanding medical balances paid from settlement−$2,000
      Net to client$38,333

      A few things this table doesn’t show. It doesn’t show what the client would have received without an attorney. An unrepresented claimant on the same facts might have seen an initial adjuster offer in the $20,000 to $30,000 range, possibly settled around $35,000, then still owed the same lien repayment from their health insurer. The net difference is meaningful, but it isn’t the difference between $80,000 and zero.

      It also doesn’t show the lien negotiation work. The Common Fund Doctrine, which reduces a health insurance lien proportionally to account for the attorney’s contribution, can knock $5,000 to $15,000 off the lien on a case like this. Most unrepresented claimants don’t know to ask for that reduction, and the insurer isn’t going to volunteer it. Lien negotiation is one of the most underrated parts of what a competent firm actually does.

      For smaller cases, the math runs the other way. Take a clear-liability rear-end with $4,000 in medical bills, total recovery of $9,000, and a $2,500 health insurance lien. A 33% contingency on $9,000 is $3,000. Case costs add another $500. The client nets around $3,000. The same client handling the demand letter themselves, with the lien still applying, walks away closer to $5,500.

      Your State Matters More Than You Think

      American auto injury law is not uniform. Twelve states use a “no-fault” system that fundamentally changes what a personal injury lawyer can do for you. The other 38 use traditional tort liability rules, where you sue the at-fault driver for damages.

      No-fault states. Florida, Hawaii, Kansas, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania, and Utah operate some version of no-fault auto insurance. In these states, your own insurer pays for your medical bills and lost wages up to a statutory limit, regardless of who caused the accident.

      The trade-off: you cannot sue the at-fault driver for pain and suffering unless your injuries cross a threshold defined by state law.

      New York is the example most worth understanding. New York requires drivers to carry $50,000 in Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage, which covers medical bills, lost earnings, and other economic losses regardless of fault. To sue for non-economic damages like pain and suffering, you have to meet the serious injury threshold defined in New York Insurance Law § 5102(d).

      The statute lists nine specific categories, including death, dismemberment, significant disfigurement, fracture, permanent loss of use of a body organ or function, and a non-permanent medically determined injury that prevents you from performing “substantially all” of your usual daily activities for at least 90 of the 180 days following the accident.

      What that means in practice: in New York, the operative question isn’t whether to hire a personal injury lawyer. It’s whether your injury crosses the threshold that allows you to bring a third-party lawsuit at all. For low-impact crashes with soft-tissue injuries, the answer is often no, and the available remedy is a PIP claim against your own insurer, which involves different legal work than a tort case.

      Tort states. Most of the country, including California, uses traditional tort liability. You sue the at-fault driver, the at-fault driver’s insurer defends, and recovery includes both economic damages (medical bills, lost wages) and non-economic damages (pain and suffering). The decision to hire a lawyer in tort states comes down to the cost-benefit factors covered above.

      California-Specific Considerations

      California is a pure comparative fault state, which is unusually plaintiff-friendly. Under the rule established in Li v. Yellow Cab Co., you can recover damages even if you were 99% at fault for your own accident. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault, but the door is never fully closed.

      That matters for the lawyer decision because it changes how insurers approach negotiation. In a state with a 50% bar (Texas, for example), a defense lawyer who argues the plaintiff was 51% at fault gets the whole case dismissed. In California, that same argument only shifts a percentage. The negotiating dynamic is different, and an unrepresented plaintiff is more likely to give that percentage away than to fight for it.

      Two other California-specific facts worth knowing.

      First, the statute of limitations for personal injury is two years from the date of injury, under Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1. If you don’t file suit (or settle) within that window, the case is gone. Two years sounds like a long time and it isn’t. Medical treatment frequently extends past it.

      Second, California raised its minimum auto liability limits effective January 1, 2025. The new minimums are $30,000 per person, $60,000 per accident, and $15,000 for property damage under Vehicle Code § 16056 as amended by SB 1107. The previous floor (15/30/5) had been in place since 1967. The change matters because the new minimums double what’s available on minimum-coverage cases, raising the value of a clear-liability claim against an under-insured driver. If you carry only the state minimum on your own policy, this is also a good time to revisit your underinsured motorist coverage.

      Common Concerns That Come up in Consultations

      A handful of concerns come up in nearly every consultation. Worth addressing directly.

      “My friend said the lawyer took most of their settlement.” That happens, and when it does, it’s usually a high-volume mill firm story. Those firms take cases they shouldn’t, send clients into a network of referred chiropractors and physical therapists whether or not the treatment is medically necessary, run up the medical bills, and then take a third or more of whatever’s left after liens. A competent firm declines cases that wouldn’t net the client more than they’d get on their own. If you’re sitting in a consultation and the attorney is enthusiastic about a $4,000 fender-bender case, get a second opinion.

      “How long is this going to take?” A clear-liability case with completed medical treatment settles in 4 to 8 months on average. Cases involving disputed liability, ongoing treatment, or significant damages take longer, sometimes 12 to 18 months before settlement and 2 to 3 years if litigation is required. Insurers slow-pay represented claimants on purpose because they know it pressures clients to accept less.

      “Are the fees negotiable?” Sometimes. The 33% pre-litigation, 40% post-filing structure is industry standard but not law. On strong cases with clear liability and serious damages, a firm may negotiate a slightly lower rate. It’s a question worth asking, and a firm that refuses to discuss it tells you something about how they operate.

      “What if I want to talk to a lawyer but don’t want to hire one yet?” That’s what free consultations exist for. A good consultation is genuinely informational. You should walk out understanding the strengths and weaknesses of your case, the likely range of value, the timeline, and what to do next. There should be no pressure to sign anything that day. Be ready to share everything that happened, including the parts that look bad.

      How to decide

      The decision framework is straightforward once you’ve worked through the factors.

      If you have any of: surgery, fracture, permanent impairment, ongoing treatment, disputed liability, commercial defendant, significant lien exposure, or long-term lost income, get a consultation. It’s free, the privilege protects what you say, and you’ll leave with a clearer view of what your case is worth.

      If you have none of those, the at-fault driver has admitted fault, your injuries resolved within a few weeks, and you have the time and patience to organize records and negotiate, handling the claim yourself is reasonable. Most insurers will settle clear-liability minor cases without serious resistance.

      If you’re not sure which category you’re in, talk to a lawyer anyway. A firm worth its name will tell you to handle it yourself when that’s the right answer.

      Talk to a California Personal Injury Lawyer

      If you’re in California and dealing with the aftermath of a car accident, DK Law offers free consultations across our locations statewide. We’ll evaluate your case and recommend whether representation makes sense for your situation. If it doesn’t, we’ll tell you what to do instead.

      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!

      Thursday, May 14, 2026

      How Hard Is It to Win a Personal Injury Lawsuit in California?

      HomeHow Hard Is It to Win a Personal Injury Lawsuit in California?

      How Hard Is It to Win a Personal Injury Lawsuit in California?

      Reading Time: 15 Minutes

      May 14, 2026Elvis Goren
      An empty California courtroom with wooden pews, a judge's bench, and the California state seal mounted on the wall, with warm sunlight streaming through tall windows onto the hardwood floor.

      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 word “lawsuit” is the wrong word for what most personal injury cases actually involve. The version on TV is a courtroom, an opening statement, and a jury foreperson reading a verdict. The version that actually happens, for nearly everyone, is letters between lawyers, a structured medical evaluation, and a check that clears months after the demand was sent.

        How hard it is to “win” depends entirely on what winning means. If it means a courtroom victory in front of a jury, that path is harder, and most people don’t take it. If it means fair compensation for what someone else did to you, the picture is much more achievable than the word “lawsuit” implies.

        Key Takeaways

        Priority
        Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
        Exhibit
        A

        Most personal injury cases never go to trial. The most recent comprehensive federal study found fewer than 5% of tort cases are decided by a judge or jury — the rest settle, get dismissed, or resolve through mediation or arbitration.

        Exhibit
        B

        California uses pure comparative fault, meaning you can recover damages even if you were partly at fault. A plaintiff found 70% responsible still recovers 30%.

        → Even at 70% fault, you still recover 30%

        Exhibit
        C

        The statute of limitations is two years for most California personal injury claims. Claims against a government entity require notice within six months of the injury.

        → Miss the six-month government notice and the claim is dead

        Exhibit
        D

        Some injuries are harder to prove than others, but “hard to prove” doesn’t mean “unwinnable.” California law expressly protects plaintiffs whose pre-existing conditions were made worse.

        Exhibit
        E

        The value a personal injury attorney provides happens mostly outside the courtroom: evidence preservation, treatment coordination, demand letter strategy, and lien negotiation usually determine what hits the client’s bank account.

        Most Cases Never See a Courtroom, and That’s the Win

        The most recent comprehensive federal study of state-court civil cases, the Bureau of Justice Statistics Civil Justice Survey, found that bench and jury trials resolved roughly 3% of general civil cases and about 4% of tort cases. The remaining cases didn’t all “settle” in the traditional sense. Some did. Some were dismissed. Some were resolved through arbitration or mediation. Some were thrown out on summary judgment. But the headline holds: the overwhelming majority of personal injury cases never produce a courtroom verdict.

        That matters because the difficulty of “winning” a personal injury case isn’t the difficulty of winning a trial. It’s the difficulty of building enough leverage that the insurance company writes a check before a jury is ever picked. Filing a lawsuit and going to trial are two different milestones, and most cases stop somewhere between them.

        What a Personal Injury Lawyer Actually Does for You

        A personal injury lawyer’s job has very little to do with arguing in court. The work that matters most happens in the first 90 days after the accident and during the months between treatment and demand.

        In the first 72 hours, the lawyer’s job is preservation. Photos of the scene before it changes. Letters to nearby businesses requesting that surveillance footage be retained before it gets overwritten in 7 to 30 days. Witness statements while memories are fresh.

        In the first weeks, the lawyer coordinates consistent medical treatment so the insurance company can’t argue “gaps in care,” collects records as they’re generated, and identifies every layer of available insurance coverage. The at-fault driver’s policy. Their umbrella policy, if they have one. Your own underinsured motorist coverage if theirs isn’t enough.

        In the pre-suit phase, the lawyer builds a demand letter package: a medical narrative, a billing summary, lost wage documentation, and a settlement demand. Most cases settle here.

        Lien negotiation is the part that’s invisible to clients and often makes the difference between a $40,000 net and a $25,000 net on the same gross settlement. When your health insurer, Medicare, or Medi-Cal asserts a reimbursement right against your recovery, every dollar negotiated off that lien is a dollar you keep.

        How contingency fees work

        You don’t pay a personal injury lawyer up front. California allows contingency fees, which means the lawyer takes a percentage of whatever they recover and nothing if they recover nothing. The standard structure is 33% if the case settles before a lawsuit is filed, and 40% if a lawsuit is filed. The firm typically advances case costs (filing fees, records, expert reports) and gets reimbursed from the settlement. Medical malpractice cases follow a different statutory fee schedule that runs lower.

        Success by Case Type in California

        How hard a case is depends on the structural challenges of the legal theory, not on a single national statistic. Liability clarity, the difficulty of proving damages, and how much insurance is available matter more than which “category” your case falls into.

        Car accidents

        The most common case type is generally the most viable. Liability is often clear from the police report. Coverage almost always exists, even if only the state minimum. The fights are usually about how much the injuries are worth, not who caused the accident. Soft-tissue cases face more defense pressure than fracture or surgical cases.

        Slip and fall and premises liability

        Harder than auto. The plaintiff has to prove the property owner knew about the hazard or should have known and failed to fix it in a reasonable time. A puddle that formed 30 seconds before the fall usually isn’t enough. The same puddle sitting unattended for an hour is. Comparative fault on the plaintiff reduces awards.

        Workplace injuries

        The most misunderstood category. If you’re hurt on the job, your primary remedy is workers’ compensation, not a lawsuit against your employer. California Labor Code § 3602 makes workers’ comp the exclusive remedy against the employer, with narrow exceptions. What it doesn’t bar is a civil claim against a third party: a defective tool, a negligent subcontractor on a multi-employer site, a motor vehicle crash while on the job, a premises owner who isn’t your employer. Those run in parallel to the workers’ comp claim and are often where real recovery is available.

        Medical malpractice

        Historically, the hardest tort category, for reasons that come down to expert testimony costs and juror reluctance to second-guess physicians. The economics changed in 2023. AB 35 replaced California’s $250,000 non-economic damages cap (frozen since 1975) with a tiered cap that starts at $350,000 and rises by $40,000 each year through 2033, eventually reaching $750,000. The wrongful death cap moves on a parallel track from $500,000 toward $1 million. These caps can stack three times across separate categories of defendants. Medical malpractice in California is meaningfully more viable than it was three years ago.

        Wrongful death

        Procedurally distinct. Under California Code of Civil Procedure § 377.60, only specific family members have standing: the surviving spouse or domestic partner, children, and certain dependents. The statute of limitations is two years from the date of death. Damages include economic loss of support and services, and the family’s non-economic loss of love and companionship.

        When tort cases do go to trial, BJS data from 2005 (the most recent comprehensive federal study) found plaintiffs prevailed in roughly half of cases across all categories. Auto plaintiffs won about 61%, premises plaintiffs about 39%, and medical malpractice plaintiffs only about 19 to 23%. The data is old, and it describes trial outcomes, not the much larger universe of cases that settled.

        The Injuries That Are Hardest to Prove (And Why “Hard” Doesn’t Mean Unwinnable)

        Some injuries are objectively harder to document. Soft-tissue injuries often show up as “unremarkable” on imaging, and the defense will argue your pain is exaggerated or pre-existing. Mild traumatic brain injury frequently doesn’t appear on standard CT scans, requiring neuropsychological testing, vestibular evaluation, and DTI imaging where available. Chronic pain syndromes are challenged as malingering.

        The most important California-specific rule for any of these cases is the eggshell plaintiff doctrine. California Civil Jury Instruction CACI 3927 tells juries that if your pre-existing condition was made worse by what someone else did, you can recover damages for the worsening, even if a “normally healthy” person wouldn’t have been injured at all. Defendants don’t get to escape liability because their victim had a vulnerable spine, a prior concussion, or earlier anxiety. The defendant takes the plaintiff as they find them.

        What “hard to prove” actually means is “requires the right documentation strategy.” Consistent treatment, the right treating physicians, neuropsychological testing where indicated, and a clear causation opinion from a treating doctor are typically what separates a settled case from a denied claim. The eggshell plaintiff rule goes deeper on this.

        How to Win Without Going to Trial

        Most of the work that wins a case happens long before any trial date is set. The moves that matter:

        Document the scene immediately. Photos of vehicles, the road, the weather, and traffic signs. The scene changes within hours.

        Get medical treatment and stay consistent. Insurance defense plays the “gap in treatment” card relentlessly. Every two-week stretch without a doctor or therapy visit becomes their argument that you weren’t really hurt.

        Stay off social media. A vacation photo, a hike, a workout video, any of these can be screenshotted by an insurance investigator and used against you for years.

        Don’t give the other driver’s insurer a recorded statement. California has no rule requiring you to. They will ask, and the request is part of the playbook.

        Don’t accept the first offer. First offers on bodily injury claims are almost always low by design.

        Engage counsel early enough that evidence is preserved. Surveillance footage gets overwritten. Witnesses move and forget. Vehicles get repaired and disposed of.

        When a case does go to trial

        Most cases don’t, but some do. Trial typically happens when liability is genuinely disputed, when the insurer refuses to negotiate within policy limits in a high-exposure case, or when damages are large enough that the carrier wants to see what a jury will do.

        The timeline in California unlimited civil cases (claims over $35,000) typically runs 18 to 30 months from filing to trial, longer in busy counties. Under California’s Five-Year Rule, the case has to be brought to trial within five years of filing or face dismissal.

        What Makes a Case Worth Pursuing?

        Whether your case is worth pursuing comes down to five factors that have nothing to do with the word “lawsuit.”

        • The injury and how well it can be documented. Severity matters less than provability. A documented mild TBI can be a stronger case than an undocumented serious one.
        • The clarity of liability. Police report, witness, dashcam, traffic camera. The cleaner the fault picture, the higher the case value.
        • The available insurance. A clearly liable defendant with no coverage and no assets is a hard case to collect on, regardless of how strong the liability looks on paper.
        • The statute of limitations. Two years for most California personal injury claims under CCP § 335.1, six months’ notice for claims against a government entity under Government Code § 911.2. If either is within sight, the time to talk to a lawyer is now.
        • Whether a good firm will take it. A firm that takes every case isn’t vetting carefully. A firm that tells you “this one isn’t worth representing, here’s what to do instead” is being honest. That call alone is worth making.

        Frequently Asked Questions

        How much will I get from a $50,000 settlement?

        After fees and costs, somewhere between $25,000 and $35,000, depending on the case. A 33% pre-litigation contingency fee on $50,000 is $16,500. Case costs typically run $1,000 to $3,000. Any medical liens (health insurance, ERISA plans, Medicare, Medi-Cal) come out before the client’s share. On a clean case with one modest lien, $50,000 gross usually translates to roughly $25,000 to $30,000 in the client’s pocket.

        How long does a California personal injury case take?

        A clear liability case with completed medical treatment settles in 4 to 8 months. Cases with disputed liability, ongoing treatment, or large damages take 12 to 18 months before settlement, and 18 to 30 months if a lawsuit has to be filed and the case heads toward trial.

        Can I still win if I was partly at fault?

        Yes. California is a pure comparative fault state. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault but not barred. If a jury finds you 40% at fault on $100,000 in damages, you recover $60,000.

        Talk to a California Personal Injury Attorney

        If you’ve been injured in California and want to know what your case is worth, the consultation is free, and the conversation is confidential. DK Law will evaluate the facts and tell you honestly whether representation makes sense in your case. If it doesn’t, we’ll tell you what to do instead.

        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.

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