The Shoulder
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Medical & injurieshumble-wren-413

Anyone willing to share what their back injury settlement looked like? Trying to set realistic expectations

Hey everyone. Going through the claims process right now after getting rear-ended at a stoplight about four months ago. The other driver admitted fault on the scene and their insurance has already accepted liability, so that part isn't really in dispute.

The problem is I found out I have a herniated disc at T12 that's causing nerve pain down my left leg. I'm still in PT twice a week and my doctor hasn't given me a 'you're all clear' yet — she keeps saying we need to see how I respond to treatment before talking next steps.

I'm not trying to get rich off this. I just want to cover my medical bills, the wages I've lost from missing shifts, and honestly... the fact that I can't pick up my kid without wincing. That last part doesn't have a dollar sign on it but it should count for something.

I haven't signed with a PI attorney yet. I've been going back and forth on it — I don't love the idea of giving up a percentage of whatever I recover, but I also have no idea what a fair number even looks like for a disc injury at my level.

Has anyone settled a spinal or disc injury claim and is willing to share — even generally — what the process looked like or what factors seemed to matter most? I'm not looking for an exact number, just trying to figure out if hiring an attorney is actually worth it or if I can handle this on my own.

Any honest input appreciated. This whole thing is exhausting.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 7
    curious-sparrow-560

    I had a disc injury from an accident two years ago — L4 this time — and honestly the thing that moved the needle most was waiting until I hit what my doctor called 'maximum medical improvement' before settling. The first offer the insurance company made was almost insulting. Once my treatment was fully documented and my doctor wrote a letter about long-term implications, things got more serious. I did use an attorney and personally felt it was worth it for the back-and-forth alone.

    • 18
      sharp-owl-151

      Not legal advice, but — the 'should I hire an attorney' question usually answers itself with spinal injuries. Permanent or long-term disc issues have what's called 'future damages' baked in: future treatment, potential surgery, lost earning capacity. Calculating those correctly is genuinely complicated and adjusters know most unrepresented people will undervalue them. Most PI attorneys offer free consultations so there's little downside to at least having the conversation.

    • 10
      kind-wanderer586

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 9
    kind-grouse-134

    Please do not give that adjuster ANY recorded statement about how you're 'managing' or 'doing okay.' They will use casual language against you later. Even saying 'I'm hanging in there' in a phone call has been twisted into 'claimant reported feeling fine.' Document everything in writing if you can.

    • 20
      clear-sparrow-288

      One thing people miss: get a complete copy of ALL your medical records before you do anything else — including the ER visit, every imaging report, every PT note. You want to read what's actually in there. Occasionally there are errors or vague language that should be clarified before those records go to an insurance company. It's your right to request them and most places have a standard process for it.

    • 4
      hopeful-traveler880

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 11
    swift-vole-440

    Former adjuster here. Disc injuries with documented nerve involvement are taken seriously on our end — they're hard to dismiss. What we always looked at was consistency: did you go to every appointment, did the imaging match the complaints, was there a clear gap in treatment? Any gaps or missed PT sessions get flagged as 'claimant wasn't that hurt.' Keep showing up even on the days you feel slightly better.

  • 20
    brave-swift-388

    T12 nerve involvement affecting your leg is not something to rush through treatment on. Make sure your doctor is documenting the functional limitations — not just 'pain,' but specifically what you cannot do. 'Unable to lift more than 10 lbs without radiating pain' is way more useful in a claim than 'reports discomfort.' Ask your PT to include functional language in their notes too.

  • 16
    swift-hare-044

    The part about not being able to pick up your kid got me. That's real. I hope you're able to get something that actually reflects what this has taken from your daily life, not just the medical bills.

  • 12
    careful-raven-013

    Here's the honest math: if liability is already admitted and you have a documented spinal injury with ongoing symptoms, you almost certainly have a claim worth more than you think. The contingency fee feels painful but attorneys in this space don't get paid unless you do — and they typically recover more than enough to offset the percentage. Shop around, get two or three free consults, and stop trying to DIY a spinal injury claim.

  • 18
    humble-seal-551

    What does 'accepted liability' actually mean in your case — did you get that in writing, or did an adjuster just say it on a call? There's a difference between an informal acknowledgment and a formal reservation-of-rights letter. Worth clarifying before you assume liability is truly off the table.