The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionsbold-wolf-860

Lawyer got me a better offer but after fees I'd take home LESS than the first offer??

I feel like I'm going crazy and need a reality check from people who've been through this.

Got rear-ended on the highway a few months back — herniated two discs and my car was a total loss. Been dealing with PT, missed a ton of work, the whole nightmare.

Insurance came at me pretty fast with an offer. Seemed low but I didn't know what I was doing so I hired an attorney on a contingency basis. They went back and forth with the adjuster and landed on a new number that's noticeably higher than the original offer. On paper it looks like progress.

Here's where my brain broke: once I actually do the math — attorney's contingency cut, medical liens that have to get paid back out of the settlement, a few costs the firm fronted — my actual take-home is lower than what I would've pocketed if I'd just accepted the first offer and paid my own medical bills.

Like... what?

Some questions I'm spinning on:

  • Can I even say no to this? My lawyer negotiated it, but it's still my case, right?
  • Do I owe them anything if I reject it? I don't want to stiff someone who put in real work, but this math doesn't add up for me.
  • Is it worth pushing for more, or do I just take it and move on?
  • Am I missing something obvious here?

I genuinely like my attorney and I don't think they're doing anything shady — I just don't understand how ending up with less makes sense. Has anyone been in this spot? What did you do?

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9 replies

  • 17
    bright-newt-014

    I had almost this exact panic moment last year. Herniated disc, rear-end, similar situation. The number my lawyer got looked bigger but the lien from my health insurance ate a huge chunk. What saved me was my attorney actually negotiating the lien down — I didn't even know that was possible until I asked. Did your lawyer try to reduce any of the medical liens? That might be where you recover some of that difference.

    • 20
      tidy-elk-729

      A couple of practical things: (1) Pull out your retainer agreement and look for language about what happens if you reject an offer the attorney obtained. Some agreements have a clause about fees being owed on the negotiated amount even if you decline — it varies a lot. (2) Lien reduction is genuinely a thing. Medical providers and insurers will often take less than the full amount, especially if the total settlement is limited. If your attorney hasn't already pushed on that, it's a reasonable thing to bring up in your next conversation with them.

  • 17
    candid-crane-127

    I'd be asking WHY the adjuster agreed to go higher so relatively quickly. Sometimes when they settle fast it means they know the full value is way more and they're still trying to close it cheap. Don't let the word 'negotiated' make you feel like you hit the ceiling. You might not have.

  • 16
    plain-owl-027

    From the other side of the desk: that first offer was almost certainly not their floor. Adjusters are trained to open low and hope the claimant is relieved enough to take it. The fact that your lawyer moved the number up is real value, even if the net feels weird right now. The lien situation is honestly the thing that catches most people off guard — it's not your attorney's fee that's the problem, it's the medical payback requirements. That piece is often negotiable though.

  • 16
    wise-grouse-710

    Two herniated discs is not a minor injury — please don't let the financial stress push you into settling before you really know what your recovery looks like. I've seen people feel 'okay enough' at a few months out and then hit a wall six months later. If you haven't hit maximum medical improvement yet, that's worth factoring in. Settlements are final.

  • 13
    silent-newt-702

    This sounds so stressful on top of already dealing with an injury and missed work. I just want to say you're not crazy for feeling like the numbers don't add up — trust that instinct and keep asking questions until you actually understand what you'd be signing.

  • 12
    silent-hare-526

    Not legal advice, but yes — the settlement is yours to accept or reject. Your attorney can negotiate on your behalf but they cannot legally force you to sign off on anything. That said, if you decline, some retainer agreements do allow the attorney to seek reimbursement for out-of-pocket costs they advanced (filing fees, records, etc.) even if no deal is reached — worth reading your contract carefully. The bigger question is whether going to litigation could get you meaningfully more. That's a real conversation to have with your lawyer directly.

  • 10
    curious-marten-335

    How far along are you in your medical treatment? Because if you're still actively treating or haven't gotten a clear prognosis yet, that changes the whole picture. Settling with unresolved herniated discs could mean you're closing out a claim that's actually worth a lot more once you know the full extent. What does your doctor say about long-term outlook?

  • 7
    plain-dove-398

    Call your lawyer and just say exactly what you said here: 'When I do the math, I net less than the original offer. Help me understand what I'm missing or what we can do about the liens.' A good attorney will not be offended by that question. If they get weird about it, that tells you something too.