Friday, April 24, 2026

14 Months?! Why Is Your Car Accident Settlement So Slow

Home14 Months?! Why Is Your Car Accident Settlement So Slow

Still Waiting? Here’s Exactly Why Your Car Accident Settlement Is Taking So Long

April 24, 2026Michelle Lysengen
Tortoise carrying a sealed envelope labeled "Settlement" illustrating a slow car accident settlement process.

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.

Depending on where you are in the US, injury settlements can take anywhere between 3 months (for simple cases) to 4+ years. Our recent study showed that more serious settlements take an average of 2-4 years before the check clears. 

California car accident settlements can often take longer than clients expect. Here’s what’s actually slowing your case down and how to tell when the delay has crossed into red-flag territory.

Key Takeaways

  • Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) is the single biggest reason for delay. Settling before your body stabilizes locks you into today’s bills and forecloses everything you’ll need tomorrow.
  • California imposes specific insurer deadlines: 15 days to acknowledge a claim, 40 days to accept or deny, 30 days to pay after acceptance. Missed deadlines are admissible as evidence of bad faith.
  • Lien resolution is where most complex California cases actually stall. Medi-Cal alone builds in a structural 5-month minimum. ERISA self-funded plans can demand full first-dollar reimbursement with no reductions.
  • If you haven’t had a substantive update in 90+ days, your attorney has a duty to respond to a written status request under California Rule of Professional Conduct 1.4.

How long does a California car accident settlement actually take?

The 6 to 9 month figure repeated across legal sources and news outlets doesn’t trace to any government, industry, or peer-reviewed source. Settlement duration is case-specific and governed by your medical trajectory, how hard liability is contested, which liens attach, and which county your case sits in.

Rough practitioner ranges look like this:

  • Clean liability, soft-tissue injury, cooperative insurer: 3 to 6 months
  • Surgery case, some liability dispute, one or two liens: 9 to 18 months
  • Disputed fault, multi-defendant, Medicare or Medi-Cal involved: 18 to 36+ months

If you’re 6 months in and things feel slow, that’s probably fine. If you’re 18 months in and no demand letter has gone out, that’s worth asking about.

You haven’t hit Maximum Medical Improvement yet (and that’s on purpose)

MMI is the point where your doctors agree your condition has stabilized. It matters because MMI is when your attorney can finally calculate what the entire case is worth: past medical bills, future treatment, wage loss, diminished earning capacity, pain, and suffering. Before MMI, those numbers are guesses.

Settle early, and you lock in today’s costs only. Tomorrow’s MRI, next year’s second surgery, the pain management you’ll need at 50 for an injury you suffered at 35, all of that disappears the moment you sign the release. Settlements are final.

How long MMI takes depends on the injury. Whiplash often stabilizes in 3 to 6 months, though peer-reviewed research finds 20 to 50% of whiplash patients still report persistent symptoms at 12 months. A herniated disc with surgery often takes 12+ months to plateau. Moderate to severe TBI may never reach MMI in the conventional sense, which is why those cases use life-care planners instead of waiting.

The insurance company is stalling (and California law can only slow them down so much)

Insurance companies use sneaky tactics, which are sometimes questionable. And sometimes outright illegal. 

Re-requesting records you’ve already sent. Reassigning your file to a new adjuster who needs to “get up to speed.” Asking for an independent medical exam. Letting deadlines slide until you push. The economics are straightforward: every day a claim sits unpaid is a day the insurer earns investment income on the reserve. 

Warren Buffett summarized the model plainly in Berkshire Hathaway’s 2022 annual letter, describing insurance premium float as money “we call float, that will eventually go to others. Meanwhile, insurers get to invest this float for their own benefit.”

California fights back with the Fair Claims Settlement Practices Regulations. Under 10 CCR 2695.5, carriers have 15 days to acknowledge your claim. Under 2695.7(b), 40 days after receiving proof of claim, to accept or deny. Under 2695.7(h), 30 days after acceptance to pay. Missed deadlines are admissible as evidence of common-law bad faith and can be reported to the California Department of Insurance.

There’s a newer piece of this worth knowing about. CCP §§ 999 through 999.5, effective January 1, 2023, codified what makes a pre-suit time-limited policy-limits demand “reasonable” for bad-faith purposes in auto cases. The new rules require a minimum 30-day response window, extendable by another 30 days on safe-harbor clarification requests. In practice, this means that a properly constructed policy-limits demand now takes 60 to 90 days to play out before anyone files a lawsuit. That’s by design.

Liability is being fought over, and California’s comparative fault rule makes every percentage matter

California follows pure comparative fault, meaning a plaintiff can recover even if 99% at fault, with their damages reduced by their percentage of fault. The upside is obvious. The less-obvious downside: because every percentage affects the final number, insurers fight harder over fault allocation here than in states with 50% or 51% bars.

A rear-end crash is usually clean. A left turn at an intersection, a lane change, a three-vehicle pileup on the 405 in rush hour, those are not clean. Each disputed percentage triggers investigation: accident reconstruction, witness re-interviews, surveillance video requests, and expert reports. On a contested case, expect 30 to 90 days added for this alone.

Your case is stuck on liens (this is where most complex California cases actually die)

If your medical care was paid for by anyone other than you, they want their money back before you see a dime. The lien negotiation process alone can add months to a case. A few lien types California attorneys run into constantly:

Medi-Cal. The state’s recovery arm (DHCS) doesn’t even request payment data from your managed care plan until 120 days after your final treatment date or settlement, because California gives Medi-Cal providers up to a year to submit bills. Add the acknowledgment window, and you have a structural floor of roughly 5 months on a clean Medi-Cal case. Managed Care Plans add another layer because each contracts with its own subrogation vendor, asserting a separate lien.

Medicare. If you’re on Medicare, CMS has its own process: a 65-day Conditional Payment Letter, a Final Demand after settlement, and a 60-day payment window before interest starts accruing. For cases above certain thresholds, a Medicare Set-Aside can add 3 to 6 months on top.

ERISA self-funded health plans. This one almost no one writes about. If your employer pays health claims directly from company reserves instead of buying traditional insurance, federal ERISA law preempts California’s normal lien caps. The plan can demand full first-dollar reimbursement with no reduction for attorney fees, no reduction for comparative fault, and no reduction for being less than made whole. These negotiations can take months.

Hospital liens. Under California’s Hospital Lien Act, hospitals can claim up to 50% of your net settlement. They often surface late in the process and complicate final distribution.

What can you actually do to speed this up?

Most of what slows a case is outside your control. A short list of things that aren’t:

  • Finish the medical treatment your doctors recommend. Gaps in treatment can be used by defense attorneys to argue you weren’t really hurt or failed to mitigate.
  • Sign medical record authorizations the day you get them. Providers have up to 30 days (plus a 30-day extension) to respond. Every day you delay stacks.
  • Return your attorney’s calls and emails within 48 hours. Most requests are blocking something else.
  • Stay completely off social media about the case. One vacation photo becomes Exhibit A at deposition.
  • Decline recorded statements to the other driver’s insurer. You are not required to give one, and doing so early almost always hurts the case.

What not to do: accept an early lowball offer, miss medical appointments, exaggerate symptoms to doctors (credibility is everything), or hire a second attorney without formally discharging the first.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the longest a California car accident settlement can take?

No statutory cap. But once a lawsuit is filed, California’s five-year rule under CCP § 583.310 requires the case to reach trial within 60 months, or it will be dismissed. In practice, 24 to 36 months is common for complex cases with ongoing treatment or lien issues. Longer than that without a clear reason is unusual and worth questioning.

Why is my lawyer taking so long to settle my case?

Most of the time, the delay is structural: waiting on Maximum Medical Improvement, negotiating liens with Medi-Cal or Medicare, or pushing back against insurer stall tactics. California’s Rule of Professional Conduct 1.4 requires your attorney to keep you reasonably informed. If 90 days have gone by without a substantive update, request one in writing. You’re entitled to a real answer.

When is a delay actually a red flag?

No communication for 30+ days. An attorney who can’t tell you the name of the adjuster handling your claim. Repeated missed deadlines. Refusal to discuss your lien status. Court backlog data from the Judicial Council shows that court calendars are real and slow, but that doesn’t explain the silence from your own attorney. Under Rule 1.16, you have the right to change attorneys at any time, and your file belongs to you.

If you’re waiting on a California car accident settlement and the quiet has started to feel wrong, we’re happy to take a look. Second opinions don’t cost anything. Sometimes the delay is your case doing what it needs to do. Sometimes it isn’t, and a conversation is a useful thing either way.

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!

The 8 Types of Auto Insurance Claims in California

HomeThe 8 Types of Auto Insurance Claims in California

The 8 Types of Auto Insurance Claims and When Each One Applies

April 24, 2026Elvis Goren
Personal injury attorney sorting through legal case files at a wooden desk with a gold scales of justice in the foreground

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.

There are eight types of auto insurance claims you might file after a car accident. They split into two categories based on who you’re filing against: your own insurer (first-party claims) or the other driver’s insurer (third-party claims). This matters more than it might seem. A claim against your own insurance company plays by different rules than one against the other driver’s, and confusing the two is one of the fastest ways to leave money on the table.

The eight main types:

  • Bodily injury liability claim – Filed against the at-fault driver’s insurer to pay for the injured party’s medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering.
  • Property damage liability claim – Filed against the at-fault driver’s insurer to pay for your car repairs or total loss.
  • Collision claim – Filed with your own insurer to repair your car after a crash, regardless of fault. Subject to your deductible.
  • Comprehensive claim – Filed with your own insurer for non-crash damage. Theft, vandalism, fire, flood, a deer through the windshield.
  • Medical Payments (MedPay) claim – Filed with your own insurer to cover medical bills for you and your passengers, no matter who caused the accident.
  • Uninsured and Underinsured Motorist (UM/UIM) claim – Filed with your own insurer when the at-fault driver has no insurance or not enough of it. In California, this is often the coverage that actually pays you in serious injury cases.
  • Wrongful death claim – Brought by a deceased person’s surviving family members, typically against the at-fault driver’s liability policy.
  • Product liability claim – A claim against a vehicle manufacturer when a defect caused or worsened the crash. Not technically an insurance claim, though it often runs alongside one.

First-party vs. third-party claims: what’s the actual difference?

A first-party claim goes to your own insurance company. You’re the policyholder. There’s a contract between you and the insurer, and they owe you a duty of good faith under California law. Collision, comprehensive, MedPay, UM, and UIM are all first-party coverages.

A third-party claim is filed against another person’s insurance company, typically the other driver’s. Because you don’t have a contract with their insurer, you’re not making a policy claim. Instead, you’re filing a negligence claim, and their insurance company negotiates with you on behalf of their policyholder. Bodily injury liability and property damage liability are the most common types of third-party claims.

The distinction matters because of who’s actually on your side. Your own insurer has legal obligations to you: prompt investigation, fair communication, and timely payment. The other driver’s insurer has none of that loyalty. Their adjuster works for them, and every dollar they pay you is a dollar out of their file. Understanding which hat the insurance company is wearing in any given conversation is the single biggest leverage point most accident victims miss.

What are the 8 types of auto insurance claims?

1. Bodily injury liability claims

If you’re hurt in a crash caused by another driver, this is where most of your compensation comes from. Their BI policy pays for your medical bills, lost income, and pain and suffering. California now requires a minimum of $30,000 per person and $60,000 per accident in bodily injury coverage, raised from the old 15/30 limits that had stood since 1967. Average BI claims run roughly $28,000 nationally, which means state-minimum policies are usually exhausted immediately in a serious case.

2. Property damage liability claims

Property damage liability pays for the other side of the wreck: your car, your bike rack, the fence you took out on the way to the curb. California raised the minimum from $5,000 to $15,000 in January 2025. For anyone who’s priced a bumper on a newer truck recently, that still isn’t much.

3. Collision claims

Collision coverage pays to repair your own car after a crash, whether or not you caused it. You file with your insurer. A deductible applies, usually $500 or $1,000, which you pay before coverage kicks in. Collision is optional in California, but lenders almost always require it if you’re financing or leasing.

4. Comprehensive claims

Comprehensive coverage protects your car from damage that isn’t caused by a collision – think falling trees, hailstorms, vandalism, or hitting an animal on the freeway. It covers the unexpected, non-collision incidents that can still leave your car in bad shape. If something out of the ordinary happens to your vehicle and you have comprehensive coverage, that’s the claim you’d file.

5. Medical Payments (MedPay) claims

MedPay is California’s version of first-party medical coverage. It pays medical bills for you and your passengers, no matter who caused the crash. This is where most articles on California insurance get confused. California is a fault state, not a no-fault state, so traditional PIP isn’t really sold here in any meaningful way. MedPay functions as the practical equivalent, according to the California Department of Insurance, though it’s narrower. No lost wages. No household services. Just medical.

6. Uninsured and underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) claims

The numbers on this one are ugly. Per the Insurance Research Council’s most recent study, about 15.4% of American drivers had no insurance in 2023, and 18% more were underinsured. One in three drivers, combined. California runs well above the national average on the uninsured side.

Uninsured and underinsured motorist is the coverage that pays when the at-fault driver can’t. Under California Insurance Code §11580.2, every auto insurer has to offer UM/UIM in every bodily injury policy, and you can only decline it by signing a written waiver. If your insurer never got that signed waiver from you, courts have treated the coverage as present at your liability limit, even if you never paid a premium for it. This is one of the first things a competent attorney investigates when an uninsured driver hits you in California.

Hit-and-run is its own wrinkle. California UM coverage reaches hit-and-run claims, but only if there was actual physical contact between the vehicles. Swerving to avoid a phantom car that never touched you isn’t enough. The AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety reported in March 2026 that 15% of all police-reported crashes in 2023 involved a driver who fled the scene. A record high.

7. Wrongful death claims

When someone is killed in a crash, the surviving spouse, children, or, in some cases, parents and dependent family members can bring a wrongful death claim against the driver who caused it. Damages cover what the survivors lost: financial support, companionship, consortium, and funeral costs. The decedent’s own pain and suffering before death is a separate claim called a survival action. Worth noting: California’s temporary rule allowing survival-action pain and suffering expired on January 1, 2026, so the rules for newly filed cases have shifted back to a narrower framework.

8. Product liability claims

Sometimes the real cause of a crash isn’t driver error. A tire delaminates at speed. An airbag fails to deploy. Electronic stability control glitches and throws the car into oncoming traffic. Those are product defect cases, and they’re pursued against the manufacturer, not an insurance company. California has some of the most plaintiff-friendly product liability law in the country, going back to the state Supreme Court’s 1963 ruling in Greenman v. Yuba Power Products. Product claims often run in parallel with a regular BI claim and can dramatically increase the total recovery in catastrophic cases.

What happens after a car accident? The claims process, step by step

The first 72 hours matter most. Call 911. Get a police report. Photograph everything. Exchange information. Don’t apologize, don’t speculate about fault, don’t try to sort out liability at the scene. That’s not your job.

Within 10 days, California requires you to file a DMV Form SR-1 if anyone was injured, anyone died, or property damage exceeded $1,000. Missing this deadline can get your license suspended independent of anything else about the accident.

Then comes the notification. Tell your own insurer no matter what, because your policy’s cooperation clause requires it. Contact the at-fault driver’s insurer only to open the claim. One thing that saves more cases than just about anything else: do not give the other driver’s insurer a recorded statement. You’re not required to in California, and doing one early, before you know the full extent of your injuries, is how insurers lock victims into lowball settlements.

The adjuster on the other side handles liability and damages analysis. Once you’ve reached maximum medical improvement or at least have a clear prognosis, your attorney sends a demand letter with medical records, bills, wage-loss documentation, and a liability narrative. Under California’s fair claims regulations, the insurer has 40 days to accept or deny after receiving proof of claim, and 30 days after acceptance to pay.

Before the money lands in your account, every lienholder gets paid first. Medi-Cal. Medicare. Your health insurer, if they have subrogation rights. MedPay, if you used it. Any hospital liens. Lien reduction is where a good personal injury attorney earns their fee several times over.

California-specific rules that change how your claim works

A few California quirks matter a lot for any type of auto claim.

First, Proposition 213 (Civil Code §3333.4) bars uninsured drivers from recovering non-economic damages, even when they weren’t at fault. Pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of consortium: gone. The medical bills and lost wages are still recoverable. The exceptions are narrower than most people think: passengers in uninsured vehicles who aren’t the owner, accidents on private property, and cases where the at-fault driver was actually convicted of DUI.

Second, California follows pure comparative negligence. If the accident was 30% your fault, you get 70% of your damages. No 50% or 51% cap as you’d see in most other states. Even a driver 99% at fault can recover 1%. That’s a real difference for borderline cases, and it’s one reason partial-fault settlements still produce meaningful compensation in California when they’d produce nothing elsewhere.

Third, the clock on filing a lawsuit is short. Two years from the date of the crash for personal injury. There are narrow exceptions (minors, delayed discovery of injury, claims against government entities), but two years is the default, and it runs faster than people think when you’re in treatment.

Fourth, your own insurer cannot raise your rates after an accident that wasn’t your fault. That’s written into California’s insurance regulations. You shouldn’t have to argue for it.

Do you need a personal injury lawyer for an auto insurance claim?

For property damage claims with clean liability and minor soft-tissue injuries, many people handle things themselves. That’s fine. Insurance companies usually pay what they owe on small claims because the cost of fighting them exceeds the cost of settling.

Things change when any of the following happen: you were hospitalized, liability is disputed, the at-fault driver was uninsured or underinsured, multiple claimants are sharing a limited policy, or the insurer has already made an offer that feels too low. In any of those scenarios, the gap between what you’d recover on your own and what an attorney can get is almost always larger than the attorney’s fee. This is especially true on UM/UIM claims, where your own insurer becomes, effectively, the adverse party the moment you file.

If you’ve been injured in a California car accident and you’re trying to figure out which type of claim applies, or whether the offer you’ve been given is fair, we’d be glad to walk through it with you. The consultation is free, and there’s no obligation. Just a clearer read on where you stand and what your case is actually worth.

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!

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Does Health Insurance Cover Auto Accidents in California?

HomeDoes Health Insurance Cover Auto Accidents in California?

Does Health Insurance Cover Auto Accidents in California?

April 22, 2026Elvis Goren
A damaged silver toy car model sitting on a wooden desk with a large stack of legal or insurance documents held together by a blue binder clip resting on top of it — symbolizing the paperwork and legal burden that follows a car accident.

Yes, your health insurance will cover medical bills from a car accident. That part is straightforward. What trips people up is everything that happens after.

California is a fault-based state, which means the driver who caused the crash is responsible for your medical costs. But liability insurance pays out at the end of a claim, not while you’re sitting in the ER. So your health insurance steps in, covers your treatment, and then quietly files a claim against your eventual settlement to get its money back. That process is called subrogation, and it can eat a significant chunk of what you thought was yours.

The short version: health insurance covers the bills, but it wants to be reimbursed. And how much it can take depends on the type of plan you have, whether you have an attorney, and a California statute most people have never heard of.

Key Takeaways

Priority
Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
Exhibit
A

Health insurance covers auto accident injuries in California, but it acts as a secondary payer — and will seek reimbursement from your personal injury settlement through subrogation.

Exhibit
B

California Civil Code § 3040 caps health insurance liens at one-third of your settlement if you have an attorney. Without one, the cap jumps to one-half.

→ Hiring counsel literally cuts the lien in half

Exhibit
C

If your health coverage comes through a self-funded employer plan (ERISA), California’s lien protections may not apply at all. Federal law overrides them.

→ Check your plan documents before you assume you’re protected

Exhibit
D

MedPay is not mandatory in California. It pays regardless of fault with no deductible — but only if you purchased it on your auto policy.

Exhibit
E

Health insurance covers medical treatment only. Lost wages, pain and suffering, vehicle damage, and disability accommodations all fall outside its scope.

How Does the Insurance Payment Order Work in California?

People assume there’s a clean sequence. Call your insurer, file a claim, and get paid. The reality is messier than that because multiple insurance policies can overlap, and none of them are in a rush.

The at-fault driver’s liability insurance carries the legal responsibility. California requires minimum bodily injury coverage of $30,000 per person and $60,000 per accident (those limits went up from $15,000/$30,000 in January 2023). But liability insurers don’t write checks while you’re still in a neck brace. They pay when the claim resolves, which could be six months from now or two years.

In the meantime, if you carry MedPay on your auto policy, that kicks in first. No fault determination required, no deductible, no copay. It just pays. Typical MedPay limits in California range from $1,000 to $10,000, so it covers immediate costs but runs out fast on anything serious. According to the California Department of Insurance, MedPay is optional coverage that you “may be offered” when purchasing auto insurance. It is not required, and a lot of drivers don’t carry it.

Your health insurance fills the gap. It covers ER visits, surgery, physical therapy, imaging, prescriptions, all of it, subject to your normal deductibles, copays, and network restrictions. And then it waits for the settlement.

What Is a Subrogation Lien and How Does It Affect Your Settlement?

Once your health insurer pays your accident-related bills, it has a legal right to recover that money from your personal injury settlement. The mechanism is a lien on your settlement proceeds.

Say your health plan paid $45,000 in medical bills. You settle with the at-fault driver’s insurer for $100,000. Your attorney takes a standard one-third fee ($33,333). Your health insurer files a subrogation lien for the full $45,000. After attorney fees plus the lien, you’re left with about $21,667 from a six-figure settlement.

California Civil Code § 3040 is the statute that limits this. For Knox-Keene HMOs and state-regulated health plans, the law caps lien recovery at one-third of the total settlement amount when the injured person has an attorney. The statute also requires the insurer to share proportionally in your attorney’s fees under what’s known as the Common Fund Doctrine, which can further reduce the lien.

There’s also the Made Whole Doctrine, an equitable principle holding that your health insurer cannot collect through subrogation until you have been fully compensated for all your losses. If a settlement doesn’t cover your total damages (medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, future care costs), the insurer’s recovery can be reduced or blocked entirely.

Both of these protections sound comprehensive. They are, unless your health insurance comes through your employer.

Why Does ERISA Override California’s Lien Protections?

This is where the two-tier system shows up. If your health insurance is a self-funded employer plan governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), federal law preempts California’s state protections. Section 3040’s lien caps don’t apply. The Made Whole Doctrine doesn’t apply. The plan’s own contractual language controls, and most ERISA plans include aggressive reimbursement provisions.

The Supreme Court confirmed this in Sereboff v. Mid Atlantic Medical Services (2006). The Sereboffs’ ERISA health plan paid about $75,000 in medical expenses after a car accident. When the couple settled the personal injury case for $750,000, the plan demanded full reimbursement and won. The Court held that ERISA plans can enforce contractual reimbursement as an “equitable lien by agreement,” regardless of state law.

Over 60% of covered workers nationally are enrolled in self-funded employer plans. If you’re one of them and you get into an accident in California, the state’s lien protections may not help you. Check your plan documents. If it says “self-funded” or “self-insured,” ERISA likely applies.

What Will Health Insurance Not Cover After a Car Accident?

Health insurance is strictly medical. Everything else falls outside its scope, and the list is longer than most people realize:

  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity while you recover (or permanently, if the injuries are severe enough)
  • Pain and suffering, including anxiety, depression, PTSD, and loss of enjoyment of life
  • Vehicle damage, repair costs, rental cars, and diminished value
  • Home modifications like wheelchair ramps or bathroom retrofits for permanent disabilities
  • Funeral and burial costs in wrongful death cases

These categories typically make up the majority of damages in serious injury cases. A liability insurance claim or civil lawsuit is the only path to recovering them.

What Should You Do Right After a California Car Accident?

The insurance billing order matters, and getting it wrong can create problems months down the line.

Use MedPay first if you have it. It pays immediately without affecting your health insurance deductible or triggering subrogation rights. If you’re unsure whether your auto policy includes MedPay, call your auto insurer and ask. Takes two minutes.

Notify your health insurer, but understand what you’re starting. The moment your health plan pays an accident-related claim, the subrogation clock begins. They will track those payments and assert a lien when a settlement materializes. This is normal. It happens in virtually every case.

Talk to an attorney before you accept any settlement offer. An adjuster’s first offer almost never accounts for lien negotiation, future medical costs, or the full value of your non-economic damages. California has a two-year statute of limitations on personal injury claims, so there is time, but not unlimited time.

If the at-fault driver is uninsured or underinsured, your own UM/UIM coverage activates as a backstop. California law requires insurers to offer this coverage with every bodily injury liability policy, and most drivers carry it unless they specifically decline in writing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does health insurance exclude auto accidents?

Not under modern plans. Before the Affordable Care Act, some policies contained auto accident exclusion clauses. The ACA’s non-discrimination provisions and essential health benefits requirements effectively eliminated those exclusions for individual and small-group plans. Some older grandfathered employer plans may retain limited exclusion language, but it’s rare.

Will using health insurance reduce my settlement amount?

Not directly, but subrogation will reduce what you take home. The settlement amount itself is based on your total damages. The issue is that your health insurer will claim a portion of it to recoup what it paid. With a skilled attorney, those liens are negotiable, and California law provides tools to reduce them significantly.

What if I don’t have MedPay or auto medical coverage?

Your health insurance still covers treatment. You’ll pay your normal cost-sharing (deductible, copays, coinsurance), and the insurer picks up the rest, subject to your plan’s terms. Some medical providers also agree to treat accident victims on a lien basis, deferring payment until settlement. The at-fault driver’s liability coverage remains the ultimate source of reimbursement, but you’ll likely need an attorney to recover it.

Injured in a California car accident and unsure which insurance to use first? Contact DK Law for a free consultation. We’ll help you navigate the billing, negotiate liens, and protect your settlement.

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.

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.

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, April 21, 2026

What Happens If There’s a Car Accident and No One Else Is Involved?

HomeWhat Happens If There’s a Car Accident and No One Else Is Involved?

What Happens If There’s a Car Accident and No One Else Is Involved?

Reading Time: 14 Minutes

April 21, 2026Michelle Lysengen
A heavily damaged dark blue vintage sedan crashed into a large tree on a muddy rural road surrounded by autumn foliage. The front of the vehicle is severely crumpled with the hood buckled and the windshield shattered. An ambulance and emergency responders are visible in the background on the dirt road.

If you’re the only vehicle in the crash, you’re generally presumed at fault. Your collision insurance covers the damage (minus your deductible), and your legal obligations depend on how much damage occurred and which state you’re in. No other driver means no other driver’s insurance to claim against. The financial weight falls on your own policy.

One thing worth clearing up right away: “no one else involved” and “no-fault state” are two completely different concepts. No-fault refers to states that require PIP insurance, where each driver’s own policy pays regardless of who caused a crash. California is not a no-fault state. It runs a fault-based tort system. So if you ran off the road and hit a guardrail in California, you’re dealing with your own collision coverage and California’s reporting laws, not some PIP framework.

Key Takeaways

Priority
Case Brief • Privileged & Confidential
Exhibit
A

Single-vehicle crashes account for 52% of all motor vehicle crash deaths nationally. These are not rare events.

Exhibit
B

Insurers treat single-vehicle accidents as at-fault by default. Expect a 20–50% premium increase in California, lasting about three years — and California does not allow accident forgiveness programs.

Exhibit
C

If property damage exceeds $1,000 or anyone is injured, California law requires you to file an SR-1 report with the DMV within 10 days. Failure to file can result in license suspension.

→ Miss the deadline, lose your license

Exhibit
D

A third party — Caltrans, a vehicle manufacturer, or an unidentified phantom driver — may share liability even in a single-vehicle crash. Government claims against a public entity have a six-month filing deadline.

→ That’s half the normal window — don’t wait

Are You Automatically At Fault in a Single-Vehicle Accident?

From an insurance standpoint, yes. When there’s no other vehicle and no external force caused the crash, the insurer looks at one driver and one set of circumstances. You were behind the wheel. The road didn’t jump in front of you (although sometimes, as we’ll get to, the road itself is the problem).

This means the claim goes through your collision coverage, which pays for damage to your vehicle regardless of fault, but you pay the deductible first. If you only carry liability insurance, you’re out of luck. Liability covers damage you cause to other people and their property. In a solo crash with no other parties, there’s nothing for liability to pay.

Worth knowing the difference: if a deer runs into your car, that’s a comprehensive claim. Different coverage, different deductible, and it typically doesn’t count as an at-fault incident on your record. But if you swerve to avoid the deer and slam into a telephone pole, that’s a collision. The swerve made it your vehicle, striking an object.

Should You File a Claim or Pay Out of Pocket?

This is where the math matters more than the instinct. Filing a collision claim after a single-car accident will likely raise your California premiums 20% to 50%, and that increase sticks for roughly three years. Industry data puts the national average increase at around 43% to 48% for a single at-fault accident.

California makes this calculation worse than most states because insurers here cannot offer accident forgiveness. Proposition 103 prohibits it. Your first at-fault claim gets surcharged just like your third.

So if your deductible is $1,000 and repairs cost $1,400, you’re collecting $400 from insurance while potentially paying thousands more in premiums over the next three years. A rough rule: if the repair estimate is within about $500 to $1,000 of your deductible, paying out of pocket probably saves you money in the long term.

Do You Have to Report a Single-Car Accident in California?

Most states require accident reports when damage or injuries reach a certain threshold. In California, the trigger is low.

California Vehicle Code § 16000 requires every driver involved in an accident to file an SR-1 report with the DMV within 10 calendar days if property damage to any one person exceeds $1,000, anyone is injured (any severity), or anyone is killed. That $1,000 threshold catches almost every real-world collision. A cracked bumper cover alone can run $800 to $1,200 in parts and labor.

The SR-1 is separate from a police report and from your insurance claim. Your insurer does not file it for you in most cases. The obligation sits with the driver.

What Happens If You Don’t File?

Vehicle Code § 16004 authorizes the DMV to suspend your driver’s license until the SR-1 is filed. Driving on a suspended license is a misdemeanor. And if you later try to file an insurance claim or pursue any legal action related to the accident, the missing SR-1 creates complications.

Filing doesn’t mean you’re admitting fault. The DMV doesn’t determine fault. It’s a factual report of the incident. But inaccuracies on the form can be used against you later, so be precise with details and don’t speculate about causes.

When Might Someone Else Be Responsible for a Single-Vehicle Crash?

You hit a guardrail, and your car is the only one involved. Seems straightforward. But three scenarios can shift fault away from you, partially or entirely.

Did a Dangerous Road Condition Cause the Crash?

A pothole that swallowed your tire. A curve with no warning sign. Faded lane markings that disappeared in the rain. Missing guardrails on a drop-off.

California Government Code § 835 holds public entities (Caltrans, cities, and counties) liable for dangerous conditions of their property. You have to prove four things: the dangerous condition existed when you were injured, it caused the crash, it created a foreseeable risk of the kind of injury you suffered, and the agency either created the condition through negligence or knew about it (or should have known) and failed to fix it.

The timeline is compressed. Under Government Code § 911.2, you must file a formal government tort claim within six months of the accident. Not two years. Six months. Miss that window and the claim is almost certainly gone, regardless of how obvious the road defect was. This catches people off guard because California’s standard personal injury statute of limitations is 2 years, and they assume they have that long for every claim.

Did a Vehicle Defect Cause the Crash?

Brake failure, tire blowout, steering malfunction, sudden acceleration. If a mechanical defect caused you to lose control, the manufacturer or parts supplier may be liable under California’s strict product liability rules. You don’t need to prove negligence, only that the product was defective and the defect caused the accident.

Preserve the vehicle. Don’t authorize repairs or disposal until the defect theory has been evaluated. The physical evidence is the case.

Did a Phantom Vehicle Force You Off the Road?

Another car cuts you off, you swerve, you hit the median, and they keep driving. You’re the only car at the scene, but you’re not the only driver responsible.California’s uninsured motorist coverage under Insurance Code § 11580.2 may apply to phantom vehicle scenarios.

But there’s a catch: you generally need corroboration that another vehicle was involved. Physical contact evidence or an independent witness. Your word alone, without supporting proof, may not be enough to trigger UM coverage for an unidentified vehicle.

What Should You Do Right After a Single-Car Accident?

Stay at the scene if you’ve damaged any property that isn’t yours (guardrails, fences, signs, utility poles). Leaving without reporting can expose you to hit-and-run liability under Vehicle Code § 20002, even if no one else was physically present.

Document everything. Photograph the vehicle damage, the road conditions, any skid marks, signage (or lack of it), and the surrounding area. Get a repair estimate before deciding whether to file a claim. File the SR-1 with the DMV within 10 days if the damage exceeds $1,000 or if you’re injured.

If you suspect a road defect or vehicle malfunction contributed to the crash, talk to an attorney before giving a recorded statement to your insurer. The six-month government claim deadline is tight, and the wrong statement early on can undermine a third-party liability case later.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a single-car accident be nobody’s fault?

Yes. If a mechanical defect, a road hazard, or another driver’s actions caused the crash, you may not be at fault at all. California’s pure comparative negligence system allows you to recover damages proportional to the other party’s fault, even if you share some responsibility.

Will my insurance go up after a single-car accident?

Almost certainly, if you file a collision claim. California drivers typically see 20% to 50% premium increases that last about 3 years. Since California prohibits accident forgiveness, even a first offense affects your rate.

Do I have to call the police if no one was hurt?

California doesn’t strictly require a police report for property-damage-only accidents. But a police report creates an official record that supports both your insurance claim and any SR-1 filing. If damage is significant, calling is the safer move.

Why should you never admit fault at the scene?

Your initial assessment might be wrong. Road conditions you didn’t notice, a vehicle defect you couldn’t see, or a phantom vehicle scenario could shift liability. Stick to the facts when talking to the police and your insurer. Save the analysis for later.

Hit a guardrail, slid off the road, or struck a fixed object in California? A third party may share responsibility. Contact DK Law for a free consultation to evaluate whether a road defect, vehicle malfunction, or phantom driver contributed to your crash.

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.

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.

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!