Tuesday, March 10, 2026

How Long Does It Take to Resolve a Medicare Lien?

HomeHow Long Does It Take to Resolve a Medicare Lien?

How Long Does It Take to Resolve a Medicare Lien?

March 11, 2026Michelle Lysengen
A cluttered desk with Medicare statements and billing documents, with a wall calendar showing Medicare lien deadlines, appeal dates, and follow-up calls circled in red.

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 standard Medicare lien resolution process can take roughly 3 to 6 months, though complicated cases can stretch past 9. A lot depends on when your attorney reported the case to Medicare’s Benefits Coordination & Recovery Center (BCRC), how many charges need disputing, and whether you’re using the expedited pathway created by the SMART Act. 

California victims dealing with both Medicare and Medi-Cal liens face an extra layer of state-level recovery rules on top of the federal process.

Key Takeaways

  • Medicare lien resolution runs 3 to 6 months on average through the standard BCRC process, but the SMART Act’s Final Conditional Payment pathway can lock in your amount within 120 days of anticipated settlement if your attorney files through the Medicare Secondary Payer Recovery Portal early enough.
  • The procurement cost reduction under 42 CFR § 411.37 is the most reliable way to shrink your lien. Medicare must reduce its recovery by the same percentage your attorney took in fees and costs. On a typical contingency fee arrangement, that’s a 33 to 40% cut. But it only applies if the fees and costs are properly documented at the settlement reporting stage.
  • Ignoring a Medicare lien can trigger double damages under federal law, and those penalties can reach your attorney personally, not just you. Interest starts accruing immediately from the demand letter, and at around the 5-month mark, the debt gets shipped to the Department of Treasury for collection.
  • California Medi-Cal liens follow separate, more favorable rules. Three overlapping caps under the Welfare & Institutions Code protect your settlement, and whichever cap produces the lowest number wins.

How Long Does the Medicare Lien Process Take?

Medicare’s recovery runs through the BCRC in stages. Once your case is reported (which can happen before or after settlement), CMS issues a Rights and Responsibilities letter within 15 days. Then comes the Conditional Payment Letter, or CPL. That takes about 65 days because Medicare needs roughly 8 weeks just to pull together all the claims they’ve paid that might be related to your injury.

The CPL is not a final bill. It’s a working estimate. And it almost always includes charges that have nothing to do with your accident, which is why the dispute period matters so much.

You get 45 days to dispute unrelated charges through the MSPRP portal. CMS reviews them. After that, once settlement details are submitted, Medicare issues its formal Recovery Demand Letter. You have 60 days to pay. Interest starts accruing from the date on that letter (not from day 60, which catches a lot of people off guard) at roughly 10% annually.

So if everything goes smoothly? About 4 months from reporting to the demand letter. If you need to dispute charges, appeal the demand amount, or your attorney was slow to report the case in the first place, you’re looking at 6 to 9 months. Sometimes longer.

Can You Speed Up Medicare Lien Resolution?

The Strengthening Medicare and Repaying Taxpayers Act of 2012 created something called the Final Conditional Payment process, and it’s the single biggest time-saver available. Your attorney notifies the BCRC through the MSPRP that settlement is expected within 120 days. During that window, disputes get resolved in 11 business days instead of 45 calendar days. Once disputes are handled, you request the Final CP Amount, which comes back as a time-stamped figure. Settlement has to happen within 3 business days of that request.

Miss any of those deadlines, and the Final CP process is permanently voided for your case. No do-overs. So timing matters.

For smaller settlements, CMS offers two additional options worth knowing about. The Fixed Percentage Option covers liability settlements of $10,000 or less involving physical trauma, letting you pay a flat percentage without waiting for the full conditional payment calculation. 

The Self-Calculated Conditional Payment option works for settlements of $25,000 or less where treatment was wrapped up at least 90 days prior, and the injury happened more than 6 months ago. Under that option, you calculate the conditional payment yourself using CPL data, and Medicare responds within 60 days.

What Are the Best Ways to Reduce Your Medicare Lien?

The procurement cost reduction is where most of the savings come from. Under 42 CFR § 411.37, Medicare has to reduce its recovery proportionally to account for what you paid your attorney. 

If attorney fees and costs total 38% of the settlement, Medicare’s lien drops by 38%. On a $100,000 settlement with $30,000 in conditional payments, that takes Medicare’s claim from $30,000 down to about $18,500.

The catch: CMS only applies this reduction when fees and costs are reported with the settlement documentation. Skip that step, and the demand comes with zero reduction. It’s automatic, but only if you trigger it.

Disputing unrelated charges is the other big one. The CPL often lumps in medical claims from the same time period that have nothing to do with the accident. A knee replacement that was scheduled before the car wreck, routine bloodwork, and a prescription refill for a pre-existing condition. All of that can be challenged and removed from the lien total.

CMS also allows hardship waivers under 42 CFR § 411.28 when the beneficiary was “without fault”, and repayment would cause financial hardship. CMS doesn’t publish approval rates for these, so it’s hard to know how often they succeed. Worth pursuing in catastrophic cases, but not something to count on.

What About California Medi-Cal Liens?

If Medi-Cal also paid for your treatment, you’re dealing with a second lien governed entirely by state law. California’s rules are considerably more protective than the federal Medicare framework. The DHCS Third Party Liability and Recovery Division handles these, and three separate caps under the Welfare & Institutions Code limit what they can take.

The 25% rule (W&I Code § 14124.72(d)) automatically reduces DHCS’s lien by 25% plus a share of litigation costs. The Ahlborn proportional allocation (§ 14124.76) limits recovery to the portion of the settlement attributable to past medical expenses only, not pain and suffering or lost wages. And the 50% net recovery cap (§ 14124.78) means DHCS can never take more than half of what you receive after attorney fees. Under § 14124.785, whichever formula produces the lowest number controls. Getting a final lien amount from DHCS can take up to 120 days on its own, so start early.

For dual-eligible beneficiaries (enrolled in both programs), Medicare’s federal lien takes priority. The Medi-Cal lien typically covers copayments, deductibles, and services Medicare didn’t pay for. Both have to be resolved independently before you get your check.

What Happens If You Ignore a Medicare Lien?

Federal law under 42 U.S.C. § 1395y(b)(3)(A) authorizes double damages against anyone who fails to reimburse Medicare from settlement proceeds. That includes the beneficiary, the insurer, and the attorney who disbursed the funds. Under 42 CFR § 411.24, CMS can recover from “any entity, including a beneficiary, provider, supplier, physician, attorney, State agency, or private insurer” that received primary payment.

The timeline escalates fast. Interest starts from the demand letter date. At day 90, CMS sends an Intent to Refer letter. At day 150, the debt goes to the Department of Treasury, which can offset your Social Security benefits, seize tax refunds, and send private collection agencies after you. CMS can also refer the debt to the Department of Justice.

Courts have upheld this reach. Federal judges have denied motions to dismiss double damages claims against law firms that distributed settlement funds without satisfying Medicare’s lien first. And the statute of limitations runs 3 years from notice of settlement, so there’s no waiting this out.

Talk to a California Personal Injury Attorney About Your Medicare Lien

Medicare lien resolution is one of those things that looks manageable on paper but gets complicated fast, especially in California, where Medi-Cal adds a whole second layer.

If you’re sitting on a settlement with a Medicare or Medi-Cal lien hanging over it, DK Law can help you work through the process, reduce what you owe, and get your money faster. Call us for a free consultation.

About the Author

Michelle Lysengen

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

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!

No comments:

Post a Comment