The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Legal questionsgentle-raven-827

My lawyer says I'll net maybe $18k from a $95k settlement — does that math add up??

I'm honestly so confused and a little suspicious right now and I need people who've been through this to help me understand.

So my case settled for what I thought was a decent amount — let's say in the ballpark of $95k. I was feeling okay about it until my lawyer walked me through the "breakdown" and suddenly I'm looking at maybe $18k in my pocket when everything is done. I feel like I got hit all over again honestly.

Here's what's eating at me:

  • Attorney fees I get, that's in the contract
  • There's a lien from the ER visit I understand in theory
  • But then there are clinic bills that I had NO idea were this high — my lawyer arranged most of those referrals and I'm just now seeing the full numbers
  • He keeps saying he'll "negotiate everything down" and it'll work out but won't give me actual numbers in writing

The thing that really set off alarm bells: my coworker was in a completely separate accident, similar injuries, went to some of the same clinics my lawyer sent me to, and her lien situation looks totally different from mine even though we had comparable treatment. Like wildly different. How does that happen?

I'm not trying to accuse anyone of anything shady but I'm also not naive. Is it normal to just trust your lawyer to handle all the lien negotiations without you being in the room? Can I ask to pay some of these providers directly myself from the settlement funds and potentially do better? Or does that even work?

Anyone dealt with this? Did you just let your lawyer handle it and it turned out fine, or did you push back and get more transparency?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 15
    kind-finch-619

    I went through something really similar and the shock of seeing that breakdown for the first time is real. What I did was ask my lawyer to send me an itemized disbursement sheet before anything got signed off. You are 100% entitled to see every single line — who gets paid what, before the checks go out. Don't let anyone rush you past that step.

    • 9
      brave-heron-135

      The clinic referral thing is what gets me. Some lawyers have arrangements with certain clinics and the billing can get... inflated. I'm not saying that's what's happening here but the fact that your coworker's numbers look so different from yours for similar care is a question worth asking out loud. Loudly.

    • 11
      humble-wolf-900

      A couple things worth knowing: you have the right to request a copy of your complete client file at any time — that includes all correspondence with providers and lien holders. Also, in most states the attorney has an ethical obligation to give you a final closing statement before dispersing funds. If you haven't seen one yet, request it in writing via email so there's a paper trail. Not legal advice, just how the process is supposed to work.

  • 22
    gentle-heron-782

    From the other side of the table — lien amounts are almost always negotiable, sometimes significantly. The question is whether your lawyer is actually working those negotiations hard or just accepting the first number the provider throws out. A good attorney can often get medical liens reduced by a meaningful percentage. If he can't explain exactly what he's doing to reduce each lien and what the starting vs. target number is, that's a gap in communication you should push on. Ask him to walk you through each lien individually on a call.

    • 2
      calm-driver213

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

  • 12
    warm-finch-075

    Not legal advice, but — what you're describing (wanting transparency on lien negotiations) is completely reasonable and any ethical attorney should welcome the conversation. You can in some situations pay certain providers directly, but there are legal complications depending on the lien type (hospital liens, health insurance subrogation, etc.) that can make DIY negotiation risky. The better move is probably demanding full transparency from your current lawyer rather than going around them. If they won't give it, that tells you something.

    • 9
      bold-vole-032

      One thing people don't realize is that what a facility bills and what they'd actually accept from a cash patient are sometimes very different numbers. It's worth asking if any of your providers would settle directly for less than the stated lien amount — some will, especially smaller clinics. Hospitals are trickier but not impossible. Your lawyer should know this and be working it.

  • 9
    candid-hare-383

    Email your lawyer today. Three questions, numbered, simple: (1) What is the exact balance owed on each lien before negotiation? (2) What are you targeting as the reduced amount on each one? (3) Can I see the itemized disbursement sheet right now? If you don't get clear answers within a few days, you have a problem.

  • 13
    bright-bison-175

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of already recovering from an accident. The fact that you're asking questions means you're paying attention — don't let anyone make you feel like you're being difficult for wanting to understand where your own money is going.

    • 0
      honest-rider927

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

    • 7
      mellow-co-pilot555

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 7
    quiet-grouse-533

    I don't want to dismiss your concerns but I'd push back a little — do you know what types of liens these are? There's a big difference between a hospital lien, a health insurance subrogation claim, and a med-pay reimbursement. Each one has different rules about how negotiable they actually are. The coworker comparison might also not be apples-to-apples depending on what insurance coverage each of you had going in. What's the biggest single lien on your sheet?