The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Insurancehearty-grouse-331

Adjuster offered just barely above my bills — is hiring a lawyer even worth it at this level?

So here's where I'm at. Got rear-ended about four months ago at a stoplight — totally not my fault, the other driver even admitted it at the scene. I've been going to physical therapy twice a week since then and my medical bills are sitting right around $11,000. The other driver's insurance just sent over a settlement offer and it's only a few thousand dollars more than what my bills already are.

Like... that's it? That's supposed to cover the fact that I can barely sleep on my left side anymore, missed almost two weeks of work, and still have flare-ups when I sit too long? It feels like they just looked at my bills and added a small tip.

I've been going back and forth on whether to get a personal injury attorney involved. My hesitation is the contingency fee — I keep doing the math in my head wondering if by the time they take their cut, I'd actually end up with less in my pocket than if I just negotiated myself and took the current offer.

But then again, I have no idea what I'm doing. I've never dealt with anything like this before. Do attorneys actually move the needle on claims that aren't huge? Or is this the kind of thing where their cut eats up any extra they squeeze out?

Has anyone been in a similar spot where the offer felt insultingly low but you weren't sure if lawyering up was worth it? What did you do and how did it go? Really just want to hear from people who've been through it.

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14 replies

  • 5
    curious-wolf-832

    I was in almost the exact same position last year. Offer came in close to my bills and I thought, 'well at least I'm breaking even.' My sister talked me into calling an attorney anyway. The lawyer ended up getting significantly more and even after the contingency fee I walked away with way more than the original offer. I was kicking myself for almost just taking that first number.

    • 15
      wise-tern-058

      Most personal injury attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless they recover for you. Before you stress about the math, just go talk to one. They can look at your medical records, your lost wages, and your ongoing symptoms and give you a realistic range of what the claim might actually be worth. You're not committing to anything by having that conversation.

  • 7
    hearty-crane-542

    That 'just above your bills' offer is a classic adjuster move. They're banking on you not knowing what your claim is actually worth and wanting this whole thing to just be over. Pain and suffering, lost wages, future treatment — none of that is in what they're dangling in front of you. Don't let them make you feel like that offer is generous.

  • 7
    bright-swan-574

    Worked in claims for years so I'll be blunt: that offer was almost certainly generated by software that looked at your bills and applied a low multiplier. There's no human sitting there thinking about how your injury actually affects your life. The moment an attorney sends a representation letter, the file gets escalated and suddenly there's a real person evaluating it. The number almost always changes. Not always dramatically, but it changes.

    • 5
      grounded-sidewalk532

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 13
    patient-sparrow-146

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this generally: the question isn't just 'will an attorney get more' — it's 'how much more, and does the net make sense.' On soft-tissue cases with ongoing symptoms and documented treatment, attorneys typically do move the number meaningfully. The contingency math usually works in the client's favor when liability is clear and treatment is well-documented, which your situation sounds like. Worth at least a free consult.

    • 12
      swift-otter-439

      Take the consult. Stop doing the math in your head with incomplete information. You don't know what the ceiling is on your claim yet, so you can't actually calculate whether the fee is worth it. Get the information first, then decide.

    • 6
      weathered-overpass711

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 18
    hearty-marten-720

    The sleep disruption and flare-ups you're describing are really important and shouldn't be dismissed. Those are quality-of-life impacts that absolutely have value in a claim. Make sure whoever you're working with — whether an attorney or yourself — has documentation of ALL of your symptoms, not just what shows up on imaging. Your physical therapist's notes matter a lot here.

    • 6
      curious-parent784

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 11
    plain-elk-085

    I just want to say I'm sorry you're dealing with this on top of still being in pain. It's so unfair that you have to fight for fair treatment when none of this was your fault. Please don't settle just because you're exhausted and want it to be over — future-you will regret it if the issues linger.

    • 7
      patient-rider689

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 16
    plain-crane-252

    Few questions that might change the picture: Is the other driver's policy limit even high enough to matter? If they had minimum coverage your ceiling might already be right there regardless of what a lawyer does. Also, is your treatment ongoing or wrapped up? Active treatment vs. discharged makes a big difference in how much negotiating room actually exists.

    • 8
      mellow-overpass463

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.