The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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swift-stoat-874

Settlement paperwork supposedly going to a judge — how much longer does this actually take?

So my accident was almost two and a half years ago and my attorney finally called me last week with what sounds like good news — apparently we're at the stage where a judge has to sign off on the settlement before anything gets disbursed to me. I honestly didn't even know that was a step in the process until my lawyer mentioned it.

I've been trying to figure out how long this final stretch actually takes. My attorney was pretty vague, just said "a few weeks" and moved on. I've been reading around and seeing everything from three weeks to three months depending on who you ask, so I'm not sure what to believe.

Part of why I'm anxious about the timing is that my car has been barely holding together since the crash. I've been limping along in it because I couldn't afford to replace it, and now I'm finally in talks with a private seller about buying something reliable. I don't want to drain my savings right before the settlement hits, but I also can't keep driving something that feels genuinely unsafe.

Has anyone been through this final judge-approval stage? Like once the settlement agreement is actually drafted and submitted, what caused delays for you — or did it move faster than expected? I know every case is different but I just want a realistic ballpark so I can make smart decisions about the car situation.

Appreciate any honest input from people who've actually been through it.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 14
    quick-kestrel-357

    Just make sure all the settlement terms are locked in writing before you start counting down. I've heard of adjusters or opposing counsel trying to sneak in last-minute language changes even at this late stage. Your attorney should have everything fully executed before it goes to the judge, but worth confirming.

  • 14
    sharp-vole-240

    On the car situation — don't drain your savings waiting on this. Settlement money has a way of getting eaten up by medical liens, attorney fees, and stuff you forgot about. What you're expecting to receive might be less than you think once everything gets deducted. Keep your car purchase budget realistic and separate from what you're expecting to get.

  • 9
    patient-vole-053

    From the insurance side, once a settlement is agreed upon and going through court approval, the carrier basically just sits and waits too. The clock on cutting the check usually doesn't start until the signed order comes back. After that, most carriers have an internal processing window — typically 2-3 weeks to actually generate and mail the check to your attorney. So mentally add that on top of whatever the court takes. Your attorney then has to handle any lien payoffs before you see the remainder. Total time from court submission to money in your pocket is realistically 6-10 weeks in my experience, sometimes faster, sometimes not.

  • 19
    mellow-elk-218

    Please don't stress so much that you rush into a bad car decision or ignore any lingering physical stuff from the accident. I've seen patients push through pain for years because they were focused on the case and didn't want to "mess things up." If you're still having any symptoms, get them properly documented now before the settlement closes — after you sign off it's typically very hard to go back.

  • 8
    quiet-heron-766

    Not legal advice, but the judge approval requirement is pretty standard in certain situations and it's actually a protective step for you, not just a formality. The more important question is whether there are any outstanding medical liens or health insurance subrogation claims that still need to be negotiated — those can sometimes cause more delay than the court itself. Ask your attorney directly about the lien resolution status. That's often what's quietly holding things up even when everyone says "it's almost done."

    • 2
      careful-optimist719

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 13
    plain-mole-449

    Two and a half years is such a long time to be dealing with all of this. I really hope the end is actually close for you. Hang in there — and maybe hold off on committing to buying that car until you have a real date confirmed?

    • 6
      quiet-driver207

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 13
    patient-owl-732

    The judge approval step usually happens when there's a minor involved, a structured settlement, or when the case was filed in court rather than resolved purely pre-litigation. The timeline really depends on how busy that particular court's docket is. Some judges have a pretty quick turnaround on routine settlement approvals, others are swamped. Your attorney's office should be able to pull the docket and give you a realistic estimate — they can literally look it up. Don't be shy about calling and asking specifically "has this been submitted to the court yet and what's the current wait time on that docket?"

  • 19
    quick-mole-920

    I went through almost the exact same thing — that waiting period after everything is supposedly "done" is honestly the most frustrating part because you feel like it should just be over. For me the judge sign-off took about five weeks from when my attorney submitted the paperwork. But my friend's case dragged out closer to ten weeks because the court docket was backed up. I'd ask your attorney specifically when they plan to submit to the court, not just "a few weeks" — that'll give you a better anchor point.