Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Does Workers’ Comp Pay for Lost Wages in California?

HomeDoes Workers’ Comp Pay for Lost Wages in California?

Does Workers’ Comp Pay for Lost Wages in California?

February 26, 2026Michelle Lysengen
A suited professional taking notes on a document folder while speaking with a construction worker in a dirty orange safety vest and work gloves at an industrial worksite.

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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.

Your paycheck stopped the day you got hurt. But rent didn’t. Groceries didn’t. Your car payment definitely didn’t.

If you got injured on the job in California, workers’ compensation does pay for lost wages. But not all of them. The system replaces roughly two-thirds of your gross weekly pay, subject to state-set minimums and maximums that adjust every year. For 2026, the maximum temporary disability payment is $1,764.11 per week, and the minimum is $264.61. That means even if you earn $200,000 a year, you’re capped. And if you’re a lower-wage worker, you’re getting two-thirds of an already tight budget.

California’s workers’ comp system is no-fault, meaning it doesn’t matter who caused the accident. You got hurt at work, you qualify. But “qualifying” and “getting paid quickly” are two different things, and the gap between them is where most of the stress lives.

Key Takeaways

Priority
Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
Exhibit
A

Workers’ comp replaces two-thirds of your gross weekly wages, not your full paycheck, up to a 2026 maximum of $1,764.11 per week.

Exhibit
B

There’s a three-day waiting period before benefits kick in, but if your disability lasts more than 14 days or you’re hospitalized overnight, you get paid retroactively from day one.

Exhibit
C

You cannot collect full workers’ comp temporary disability and state disability insurance at the same time for the same injury.

→ Double-dipping triggers clawbacks — coordinate benefits carefully

Exhibit
D

If a third party caused your workplace injury (like a negligent driver), you may be able to recover the remaining one-third wage gap through a personal injury claim.

Exhibit
E

Workers’ comp liens on personal injury settlements are governed by Labor Code § 3860 and are often negotiable.

→ Don’t accept lien amounts at face value — always negotiate

How Does California Calculate Your Workers’ Comp Wage Replacement?

The formula itself is simple. Take your gross weekly wages before the injury. Multiply by two-thirds. That’s your temporary disability benefit.

So if you were earning $1,200 a week, your TD payment would be about $800. Straightforward enough. But the state sets a ceiling and a floor. For injuries occurring in 2026, you can’t receive more than $1,764.11 per week or less than $264.61, regardless of your actual earnings. These numbers adjust annually based on the State Average Weekly Wage, which increased about 5% from 2025 to 2026.

“Gross wages” means your total pay before taxes and deductions. Overtime counts. Tips count. Bonuses that are part of your regular compensation count. A lot of people only think about their base hourly rate and shortchange themselves in their calculations.

When Does Workers’ Comp Start Paying?

Not immediately. And this catches people off guard.

California Labor Code § 4652 creates a three-day waiting period. You don’t get paid for the first three days you miss work after your injury. Think of it like a deductible, except instead of money, it’s time.

Two exceptions. If your disability continues for more than 14 days, the waiting period becomes retroactive, and you get paid for those first three days after all. Or if you’re admitted to a hospital as an inpatient (not just observed in the ER), you get paid from day one. Observation stays don’t count. Actual admission does.

Once your claim is accepted, TD payments come every two weeks. Your first check should arrive within about 14 days of your employer being notified of the injury. If it’s late, that’s a red flag. California penalizes claims administrators who drag their feet on payments.

Who Pays Your Medical Bills While You’re on Workers’ Comp?

This is where people get confused. Workers’ comp and health insurance play very different roles, and understanding which one covers what can save you from surprise bills.

Your employer’s workers’ comp insurance pays all medical costs related to your workplace injury. Doctor visits, surgery, physical therapy, prescriptions, and imaging. All of it. You should never receive a bill for treatment connected to your work injury. If you do, something went wrong in the process, and you should flag it immediately.

Your regular health insurance stays in place for everything unrelated to the workplace injury. Caught the flu while recovering from a broken wrist at work? Health insurance covers the flu. Workers’ comp covers the wrist.

California law doesn’t require your employer to keep paying your health insurance premiums while you’re out on workers’ comp leave. Your workers’ comp medical coverage handles the injury itself, but your regular benefits could lapse. Check with your HR department about COBRA or continuation options early.

Can you collect state disability insurance and workers’ comp at the same time? 

Not for the same injury. California prohibits stacking full TD benefits and full SDI for the same wage loss period. If you have a separate, non-work-related condition on top of your workplace injury, partial SDI coordination might be possible, but those situations are complicated and worth discussing with an attorney.

What Happens to Workers’ Comp Benefits When You Settle an Injury Case?

If someone other than your employer caused your workplace injury (a negligent driver, a defective product manufacturer, a property owner), you might have both a workers’ comp claim and a personal injury claim. The personal injury claim is how you recover that one-third of your wages that’s unaccounted for, plus pain and suffering and other damages that workers’ comp never covers.

But there’s a catch. Your workers’ comp insurer gets a lien on your personal injury settlement. Under Labor Code § 3860, they’re entitled to be reimbursed for the benefits they paid you. The settlement proceeds get distributed in a specific order: litigation costs and attorney fees first, then the workers’ comp lien, then whatever remains goes to you.

The good news is that liens are often negotiable. Workers’ comp insurers know that if their lien eats up the entire settlement, the injured worker has no reason to pursue the personal injury case in the first place. So there’s a built-in incentive for them to negotiate. Your attorney can often reduce the lien amount, especially when they’re the ones who did all the work to secure the settlement.

What Should You Do If Workers’ Comp Isn’t Covering Your Full Lost Wages?

Workers’ comp was designed as a safety net, not a full replacement. That one-third wage gap is real, and for most families, it’s the difference between keeping up with bills and falling behind.

If your benefits are denied or delayed, you have the right to challenge the decision through the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board. If a third party caused your injury, a personal injury claim can recover the wages workers’ comp doesn’t touch, plus compensation for pain and suffering.

Contact DK Law for a free case evaluation. We’ll look at your situation, explain whether a third-party claim could increase your total recovery, and you won’t pay anything unless we win.

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!

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Auto Accident Case in California: Process From Start to Finish

HomeAuto Accident Case in California: Process From Start to Finish

Auto Accident Case in California: Process From Start to Finish

February 25, 2026Elvis Goren
Two cars involved in a collision at a wet intersection during dusk, with traffic lights and street lights illuminating the rain-slicked road, overlaid with the text 'Auto Accident Case | Explained.

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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.

You’ve been in an accident. The adrenaline has faded, the pain hasn’t, and now you’re sitting in a waiting room or lying in bed trying to figure out what comes next. Maybe an insurance adjuster already called with a number that felt insultingly low. Maybe a friend told you to “get a lawyer,” but nobody explained what that actually means in practice.

Here’s the thing most law firm websites won’t tell you: an auto accident case isn’t one event. It’s a process that unfolds over months, sometimes over a year, with specific phases that each serve a purpose. The decisions you make in the first few weeks affect what lands in your bank account at the end.

This is what your case actually looks like from the inside.

Key Takeaways

  • Most California auto accident cases settle in 6 to 18 months. Simple cases with clear fault and minor injuries can wrap up in three to six months. Serious injuries or disputed liability push that timeline to 12-24 months or longer.
  • Medical liens can eat 30% to 60% of your settlement if nobody negotiates them. California law caps hospital liens at 50% of your net recovery and health insurance liens at one-third of your settlement under Civil Code 3040. A good attorney fights these down aggressively.
  • About 97% of personal injury cases never go to trial, according to federal civil case data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics. Filing a lawsuit isn’t about going to court. It’s about getting access to discovery tools and creating pressure that makes the insurance company take your claim seriously.
  • You have two years to file. California’s statute of limitations gives you two years from the date of injury for most auto accident claims. Government entity cases? Six months. Miss these deadlines, and your case is gone.

How Long Does an Auto Accident Case Take in California?

There’s no single answer, but there is a predictable pattern. Think of it in three phases.

Phase 1: Treatment and investigation (0-6 months). You focus on getting better. Your attorney focuses on building the file. Police reports get pulled, medical records get collected, and witness statements get locked down. Nothing gets sent to the insurance company until you’ve reached maximum medical improvement, or at least until your doctors have a clear picture of your long-term prognosis. Settling too early, before you know the full extent of your injuries, is one of the most expensive mistakes people make.

Phase 2: Demand and negotiation (6-12 months). Your attorney sends a demand package to the insurance company. This isn’t a one-page letter. It’s a detailed document that lays out liability, documents every medical treatment, calculates economic losses, and makes the case for pain and suffering. The insurer responds, usually with something lower than the demand, and negotiations go back and forth. Straightforward cases with clear fault often settle within this window.

Phase 3: Litigation (12-24+ months). If the insurance company won’t offer a fair number, your attorney files a lawsuit. This opens up discovery, which is the formal process where both sides exchange evidence, answer written questions (interrogatories), and take depositions under oath. Discovery alone takes 6 to 12 months, depending on complexity. After discovery, most cases go through mediation before ever reaching a courtroom. About 80% of California civil cases filed with Superior Courts conclude within 24 months.

A Martindale-Nolo Research survey found that the average car accident settlement takes about 10.7 months. That’s across all severities. For California specifically, back and neck injury settlements range from $2,500 for minor soft tissue cases to over $1.25 million for severe spinal injuries. Your number will depend on how badly you were hurt, how clear the fault is, and how cooperative the insurance company decides to be.

Why Do Medical Liens Take Such a Big Bite Out of Settlements?

This is the part that blindsides people. You settle for $200,000 and start doing the math. Attorney fees, some costs, the rest is mine. Then your lawyer mentions liens, and suddenly that number shrinks.

Medical liens are claims against your settlement from anyone who paid for your accident-related treatment. Hospitals, health insurers, Medi-Cal, and Medicare. They all want their money back, and they have a legal right to get it from your settlement before you see a dime. In some cases, liens consume 30% to 60% of a settlement before the client sees anything.

Here’s how the hierarchy typically shakes out in California:

  • Hospital liens filed under California Civil Code 3045.4 are capped at 50% of your net recovery after attorney fees and costs. So they can’t take everything, but they can take a lot.
  • Health insurance liens are limited to one-third of your settlement under California Civil Code 3040 if you have an attorney (one-half without one). On a $100,000 case, that protection alone is worth $16,700.
  • Medi-Cal liens are required by statute to be reduced based on the overall settlement value, fees, and costs. In one published case example, a Medi-Cal lien of over $81,000 was negotiated down to $11,430.
  • Medicare liens are the toughest. Medicare has what’s called a “super lien,” and while attorneys can negotiate the amount, Medicare rarely waives its claim entirely. Paying it back isn’t optional.

This is where your attorney earns their fee in ways you might not expect. Between the Common Fund Doctrine (which forces lienholders to share your attorney’s costs) and lump-sum discount negotiations (providers routinely accept 25-50% less for immediate payment), skilled lien work can mean tens of thousands more in your pocket.

What Does California’s Comparative Negligence Rule Mean for Your Case?

California uses pure comparative negligence. That means you can recover damages even if you were partially at fault. If a jury decides you were 30% responsible and your damages total $500,000, you’d still recover $350,000.

This cuts both ways, though. Insurance companies love to argue comparative negligence because every percentage point of fault they pin on you reduces what they owe. If they can convince an adjuster or jury you were 40% at fault instead of 10%, that’s a massive swing on a large claim.

Why Does Filing a Lawsuit Sometimes Help Your Settlement?

This confuses a lot of people. They hear “lawsuit” and picture a courtroom and a judge. But filing a lawsuit isn’t about going to trial. It’s about pressure.

Before you file, the insurance adjuster handling your claim has limited authority and limited motivation to offer top dollar. After you file, the case moves to a litigation team with a real budget. Discovery opens up, and now your attorney can subpoena records, depose witnesses, and force the insurance company to show its hand.

Roughly 97% of personal injury cases never make it to trial. The lawsuit is the tool that gets you to that better settlement number. Mediation, which typically happens 9-18 months after filing, is where most litigated cases actually resolve.

What Happens After You Settle?

You agreed to a number. Great. But your check doesn’t arrive the next day. There’s a process, and it adds another 30-90 days to your timeline.

Your attorney receives the settlement check and deposits it into their client trust account. The check clears (7-14 days for large amounts). Then comes lien resolution: your attorney contacts every provider, insurer, and government agency with a claim to negotiate final amounts. Hospital liens might take a few weeks. Medi-Cal or Medicare? Months.

After all liens are resolved, your attorney prepares a final disbursement statement showing every dollar: attorney fees (typically 33% pre-litigation, 40% if the case went to litigation), case costs, lien payments, and your net recovery. Then they cut your check.

One more thing people don’t think about: the IRS generally doesn’t tax personal injury settlements for physical injuries. Compensation for medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering is typically tax-free. Punitive damages and interest are taxable.

The Decisions You Make Early Matter Most

Evidence disappears. Witnesses forget. Surveillance footage gets recorded over. The strongest cases are built in the first weeks, not the last months. Get your police report. Document everything. Keep every medical record and receipt.

If you’re dealing with an auto accident in California, contact DK Law for a free case evaluation. We’ll walk you through what your timeline and case value could realistically look like.

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!

Sunday, February 22, 2026

How Long Can a Lawyer Hold Money in Trust in California?

HomeHow Long Can a Lawyer Hold Money in Trust in California?

How Long Can a Lawyer Hold Money in Trust in California?

Reading Time: 7 Minutes

February 23, 2026Elvis Goren
A brass hourglass with golden sand sits beside a wax-sealed legal document on a wooden desk, representing legal deadlines and the statute of limitations for personal injury claims in California.

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.

Your case settled weeks ago. Maybe months. Your lawyer said the check was deposited, gave you a vague timeline, and now you’re sitting here waiting.

You’re not being impatient. You’re asking a question that thousands of Californians ask every year, and you deserve a straight answer.

California law requires attorneys to pay or deliver client funds “promptly” under Rule 1.15 of the Rules of Professional Conduct. In practice, most personal injury settlements get disbursed within 30 to 45 days. But “promptly” is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence, and sometimes legitimate delays push that timeline out to 90 days or longer.

Here’s what’s actually going on with your money, when you should be patient, and when you should start making calls.

Key Takeaways

  • Bank holds and medical liens cause the most common delays. Federal law allows banks to hold large checks for 7-11 business days, and Medicare lien resolution alone can take 65-120 days.
  • You have the right to a full written accounting. Your attorney must provide one when you ask. If they dodge, delay, or ignore that request, you can escalate to a State Bar complaint.
  • Trust account violations make up about 10% of California State Bar disciplinary actions. The Client Security Fund has paid over $100 million to clients hurt by attorney theft. Protections exist because this happens.

What Does “Holding Money in Trust” Actually Mean?

When your lawyer receives a settlement check, they don’t deposit it into their personal account. California requires attorneys to maintain separate client trust accounts with individual ledgers for each client. Your money sits in this account, completely walled off from the firm’s operating funds, until it’s time to pay out.

Small amounts or funds held briefly go into pooled IOLTA accounts. The interest on those goes to the Legal Services Trust Fund Commission to fund legal aid programs. You don’t see a dime of that interest, and that’s fine for short holds.

But if your settlement is large, say over $50,000, or will be held for an extended period, your attorney should place it in an individual interest-bearing account. That interest belongs to you. Not the firm. Not the state. You. If your $300,000 settlement sat in a pooled IOLTA for three months earning interest for someone else, that’s a conversation worth having.

How Long Does Settlement Disbursement Really Take?

The timeline breaks down into stages, and understanding each one will help you figure out whether your attorney is stalling or just dealing with a slow bureaucracy.

Week 1-2: The bank holds. Under Federal Reserve Regulation CC, banks can hold local checks for up to 7 business days and non-local checks for 11 business days. Checks over $5,525 can trigger extended holds. Settlement checks over $100,000? Major banks routinely hold those for 7-14 business days. Your attorney can’t disburse money that hasn’t cleared.

Week 3-4: Lien verification and negotiation. This is where things slow down. Your attorney needs to confirm every medical provider, hospital, and government agency that has a lien on your settlement. Hospital liens filed under California Civil Code Section 3045.1 take 30-90 days to resolve. If Medicare paid for any of your treatment, the Benefits Coordination & Recovery Center needs a minimum of 60 days to process the final demand. Sixty days minimum. Sometimes 120.

Week 5-6: Final accounting and payout. Once liens are confirmed and negotiated down (which your attorney should be doing aggressively on your behalf), they prepare the final disbursement showing every deduction. Fees, costs, liens, your take-home. Then they cut your check.

So a clean, straightforward case with no Medicare involvement and no lien disputes? Four to six weeks. A case with Medicare conditional payments and multiple hospital liens? Three to four months is normal. Frustrating, but normal.

What Are Valid Reasons for Longer Delays?

Not every delay means something shady is going on. Some of the most common legitimate reasons:

  • Medicare or Medi-Cal recovery claims. Medi-Cal third-party liability recovery averages 45-75 days, and complex cases with multiple providers can stretch past 120 days. Your attorney literally cannot release funds until these are resolved without risking your liability.
  • Disputed fees or costs. If you and your attorney disagree about the fee split or case expenses, the disputed portion stays in trust until you reach an agreement or go through California’s mandatory fee arbitration program.
  • Tax liens or child support holds. Government agencies can intercept settlement funds for outstanding obligations. Your attorney has to comply.
  • Structured settlement setup. If part of your settlement is going into an annuity, that takes 30-60 days for underwriting, court approval, and IRS reporting.

What Red Flags Should You Watch For?

There’s a difference between a complicated lien situation and an attorney who’s avoiding you. Watch for these:

Your attorney won’t return calls or emails about the disbursement timeline. Under Rule 1.4, California attorneys must respond to client communications within a reasonable time. The State Bar considers 30 days without a response as evidence of a communication failure.

They can’t explain where your money is. You ask for a written accounting and get excuses. Or silence. Rule 1.15(e) says you’re entitled to a full written accounting when you request one. Period.

Funds have been held for 90+ days, and no one can tell you why in writing. At that point, something is either seriously wrong with the case administration or seriously wrong with the attorney.

They claim fees are “still being calculated” after 60 days. Your fee agreement was signed before the case started. The math isn’t that hard.

How Do You Get Your Money If Your Attorney Won’t Release It?

Start calm, escalate as needed.

Step 1: Send a written request. Email your attorney and ask for a full written accounting of your settlement funds, including the current balance in trust, all pending liens, and an estimated disbursement date. Keep it professional. Keep a copy.

Step 2: Send a certified letter with a deadline. If no response within 14 days, send a formal demand via certified mail. Reference Rule 1.15’s requirement for prompt delivery, state the settlement date and amount, and give them 14 days to respond.

Step 3: File a State Bar complaint. If your attorney still won’t communicate or release funds, file a complaint with the State Bar of California. You’ll need your settlement agreement, written communications, and any trust account statements you have. The Office of Chief Trial Counsel investigates trust account violations within 90-180 days, and roughly 35% of these investigations result in formal discipline, ranging from public reproval to disbarment.

Step 4: Fee arbitration. If the dispute is specifically about fees, California Business and Professions Code Section 6200 gives you access to mandatory fee arbitration, with decisions typically reached in 60-90 days.

You Have More Power Than You Think

Most attorneys handle trust accounts exactly the way they should. The delays are real, the lien resolution process is genuinely slow, and banking holds on large checks take time. But California built protections into the system for a reason. If your attorney has your settlement money and won’t explain why you don’t have it yet, you have every right to push back.

If your attorney is holding your settlement funds and you’re not getting clear answers, talk to someone who can help.

We can review your situation and help you understand your options.

Call DK Law 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!

Friday, February 20, 2026

How to Claim Lost Wages from a Car Accident in California

HomeHow to Claim Lost Wages from a Car Accident in California

How to Claim Lost Wages from a Car Accident in California

February 21, 2026Elvis Goren
A January calendar with multiple days crossed out in red marker, surrounded by two calculators and receipts on a blue surface, symbolizing missed work days and lost wages following an accident.

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’re hurt. You’re missing work. And the bills don’t care that some distracted driver ran a red light and turned your life upside down.

This is where most people panic. The rent is due, your car is totaled, and your employer is being weirdly vague about when they’ll “hold your position.” Meanwhile, the at-fault driver’s insurance company is already trying to lowball you before you even know what your claim is worth.

California law says you’re entitled to full compensation for all detriment proximately caused by someone else’s negligence. That’s Civil Code § 3333. “All detriment” includes every paycheck you’ve missed and, in many cases, the paychecks you’ll miss in the future. California is a fault state with no personal injury protection insurance, so your recovery comes through the at-fault driver’s liability coverage or a lawsuit.

Key Takeaways

Priority
Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
Exhibit
A

California doesn’t require a physical injury to recover lost wages. If PTSD, driving anxiety, or a totaled car kept you from working, you may still have a claim under Civil Code § 1714.

Exhibit
B

You have two years from the accident date to file a personal injury lawsuit in California — but only six months if a government vehicle was involved.

→ Miss the government claim deadline and your case is gone forever

Exhibit
C

Self-employed and gig workers can absolutely claim lost income. It’s harder to prove without pay stubs, but California courts allow it with the right documentation.

Exhibit
D

Lost wages received as part of a physical injury settlement are tax-free under federal law — and California conforms. Many law firm websites get this wrong.

Exhibit
E

As of January 1, 2025, California’s minimum auto insurance limits doubled under SB 1107 to $30,000 per person and $60,000 per accident — meaning more coverage available for your claim.

Can You Get Lost Wages from a Car Accident Without a Physical Injury?

Yes. And this surprises a lot of people.

California Civil Code § 1714 says everyone has a duty to exercise ordinary care to prevent injury to others. Notice the word it uses. “Injury.” Not “physical injury.” That distinction matters a lot.

The California Supreme Court cleared this up back in 1980 with Molien v. Kaiser Foundation Hospitals. The court held that a direct victim of negligence can recover damages for emotional distress without any physical injury at all. The reasoning was simple and hard to argue with: emotional injury can be every bit as severe and debilitating as physical harm.

What Qualifies as a Non-Injury Lost Wages Claim?

A few common scenarios. You develop PTSD or severe driving anxiety after the accident and can’t get behind the wheel to commute. Your car is totaled, you live 30 miles from work, and there’s no reasonable alternative transportation. You’re spending hours every week dealing with insurance adjusters, sitting in repair shops, or attending depositions.

All of these can form the basis of a lost wages claim. The critical piece is causation. You need a clear line from the defendant’s negligence to your missed paychecks. For emotional distress claims, that typically means a formal diagnosis from a mental health professional. A psychiatrist documenting acute stress disorder or PTSD carries real weight.

One more thing worth knowing. There’s no cap on emotional distress damages in California car accident cases. The MICRA cap only applies to medical malpractice. Car accidents are a different ballgame entirely.

What Steps Do You Need to Take to Claim Lost Wages After a California Car Accident?

  • Start collecting evidence from day one: Seriously, day one. The more organized your records are, the harder it is for the insurance company to chip away at your claim.
  • Collect your pay stubs: You’ll want three to six months of pay stubs plus two years of W-2s or 1099s. Get your employer to write a verification letter that includes your job title, hire date, regular hours, pay rate, overtime rate, the exact days you missed, and any bonuses or commissions you would have earned during that period. If your employer won’t write one voluntarily, your attorney can request it formally.
  • Medical records: You need documentation from your doctor specifically stating that your injuries prevented you from working, with a prognosis and return-to-work timeline. Vague notes don’t cut it. “Patient should rest” is weak. “Patient is unable to perform occupational duties due to lumbar disc herniation and is expected to remain out of work for approximately eight weeks” is strong.
  • Keep a daily journal: Track every missed day, every partial day for a doctor’s appointment or physical therapy session, every hour spent dealing with accident-related tasks. Include missed overtime opportunities. Include commissions you would have earned based on your track record. And here’s something most people don’t realize: if you used sick days or vacation time to cover your absence, you can still recover those. The collateral source rule established in Helfend v. Southern California Rapid Transit says payments from independent sources don’t reduce what the at-fault party owes you. 
Infographic titled 'Steps to Claim Lost Wages After a California Car Accident' outlining four steps: (1) Collect Evidence from Day One — take photos and gather accident records; (2) Gather Income Documents — pay stubs, W-2s, and employer letter; (3) Get Medical Records — doctor's note verifying work restrictions; (4) Keep a Detailed Journal — track missed days, hours, and lost earnings.

What’s the Filing Deadline?

Two years from the date of injury. That’s CCP § 335.1. Sounds like plenty of time until it isn’t.

But if a government vehicle caused your accident, a city bus, a county truck, or a state vehicle, you only have six months to file an administrative claim under Government Code § 911.2. Miss that window, and your claim is likely dead. This catches people off guard constantly.

One important note: don’t settle before you’ve reached Maximum Medical Improvement. That’s the point where your doctor says you’re as healed as you’re going to get. Settling early almost always means leaving money on the table because you don’t yet know the full extent of your losses.

What’s the Difference Between Lost Wages and Lost Earning Capacity in California?

Infographic titled 'What's the Difference Between Lost Wages and Lost Earning Capacity in California? (A Legal Distinction)' comparing two legal concepts. Past Lost Wages (CACI 3903C): actual income missed between the accident and settlement or trial, including hourly rate, overtime, bonuses, and fringe benefits. Classified as Special Damages with a specific dollar amount — proof requires records such as pay stubs and tax forms. Lost Earning Capacity (CACI 3903D): reduction in ability to earn in the future, not based on actual earnings but on ability. Classified as General Damages inferred from injury — a jury can infer from the nature of injuries alone with no proof of pre or post-accident earnings required, per Connolly v. Pre-Mixed Concrete Co. Key takeaway: Understanding this distinction is crucial for accurately valuing your injury claim in California.

People use these terms interchangeably, but they’re actually two very different legal concepts, and understanding the difference can significantly change what your claim is worth.

Past lost wages (covered under CACI jury instruction 3903C) are straightforward. It’s the income you actually lost between the accident date and the date of your settlement or trial. Your hourly rate times the hours you missed, plus overtime, bonuses, commissions, and fringe benefits. These are special damages, meaning you have to prove the specific dollar amount.

Lost earning capacity (CACI 3903D) is something different entirely. It’s not about what you actually earned. It’s about the reduction in your ability to earn going forward. And this distinction is huge for certain kinds of cases. The California Supreme Court held in Connolly v. Pre-Mixed Concrete Co. that lost earning capacity is general damages. Meaning a jury can infer it from the nature of your injuries alone, without proof of actual earnings or income before or after the accident.

Think about a 25-year-old construction worker who suffers a permanent back injury. Maybe he was only making $45,000 a year at the time of the accident. But his earning capacity over a 40-year career, factoring in promotions, raises, and skill development, could be worth millions. That’s the difference.

How Do Self-Employed Workers Prove Lost Income After a Car Accident?

The legal standard is proving your losses with a “reasonable degree of certainty.” Harder than for a W-2 employee? Sure. Impossible? Not even close. California courts have been awarding lost income to self-employed claimants for decades.

What Documentation Do Different Work Types Need?

Gig workers (Uber, Lyft, DoorDash): Pull your detailed earnings reports from the app dashboard, not just the summary. Grab your 1099-K forms and bank records. And do this immediately. Screenshot everything you can. Rideshare and delivery companies will sometimes suspend accounts after a reported accident, and once that happens, accessing your earnings data gets a lot harder.

Freelancers and consultants: Client contracts, invoices, 1099-NEC forms, bank deposits, cancelled or postponed engagements, and email correspondence documenting lost work are all fair game. If a client cancelled a $10,000 project because you couldn’t deliver on time, that cancelled contract is evidence.

Small business owners: Profit and loss statements, bank records, and replacement worker costs. If you had to hire someone to cover your duties while you recovered, those wages are part of your claim. This is where it gets interesting: under Webb v. Standard Oil, tax returns are privileged in California personal injury cases. You may not have to produce your full returns. You can use P&L statements, receipts, and bank records instead.

What If Your Tax Returns Show Low Income?

This scares a lot of self-employed people, but it shouldn’t. Business deductions reduce your taxable income, but they don’t reflect your actual earning capacity. A freelancer who grosses $120,000 but shows $45,000 in net income after legitimate deductions wasn’t earning $45,000. A forensic accountant can reconstruct your true earnings picture from gross revenue, bank deposits, and client records. Personal injury attorneys typically front expert costs on contingency, so you don’t pay anything upfront.

Are Lost Wages from a Car Accident Taxable in California?

This is the one that trips up the most people. And honestly, a lot of lawyer websites get it wrong, too.

Are Lost Wages Tax-Free in Physical Injury Claims?

Yes. All compensatory damages, including the lost wages portion, are excluded from gross income under IRC § 104(a)(2) when they’re received “on account of personal physical injuries.” IRS Revenue Ruling 85-97 says this explicitly. The Supreme Court confirmed it in Commissioner v. Schleier. California conforms to the federal treatment through Revenue and Taxation Code § 17131.

So if you were physically hurt in a car accident and your settlement includes $30,000 for lost wages, $50,000 for medical bills, and $20,000 for pain and suffering, you owe zero taxes on all of it. The only parts of a physical injury settlement that get taxed are punitive damages and prejudgment interest.

What About Claims Without Physical Injury?

Different story. If your claim is purely for emotional distress without physical injury, lost wages become fully taxable as ordinary income. The 1996 Small Business Job Protection Act drew this line. And physical manifestations of emotional distress, things like insomnia or anxiety attacks, don’t count as “physical injury” for tax purposes. The D.C. Circuit Court confirmed that in Murphy v. IRS.

This is why settlement language matters so much. How your damages are allocated in the settlement agreement can have real tax consequences. Work with your attorney and a tax professional to get the language right.

Talk to a California Lost Wages Attorney

California’s two-year statute of limitations and six-month government claim deadline mean time matters. The longer you wait, the harder it gets to document your losses and the more power the insurance company has over you.

If you’re missing work because of someone else’s negligence, contact DK Law for a free case review. We’ll explain your options, and you won’t pay anything unless we recover compensation for you.

Call DK Law 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.

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