The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
patient-marten-505

Signed my settlement paperwork weeks ago — where is my check??

I honestly thought the hard part was over once I finally agreed to the settlement amount. Signed everything, got confirmation it was received, and now I'm just... waiting. Again.

For context, this whole thing started when someone blew through a stop sign and T-boned me on my way to work. Spent months dealing with physical therapy, missed shifts, the whole nightmare. My attorney said we had a solid case and eventually we hammered out a number I could live with.

That was over a month ago. Every time I call the office I get some variation of "the check is being processed" or "the insurance carrier has to cut the release funds" — but nobody gives me an actual timeline.

I've already been patient for close to 18 months dealing with this case overall. At what point is this delay abnormal? Is the insurance company dragging their feet on purpose? Does my attorney's office have any obligation to push harder? I don't want to be a nuisance but I also feel like I'm being strung along.

Has anyone else gone through this stretch between "settled" and actually holding the money? What's realistic to expect? And is there anything I can actually do to light a fire under someone, or do I just have to keep waiting and hoping?

Really appreciate any insight — this community has been more helpful to me than almost anyone involved in my actual case, honestly.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 13
    patient-dove-151

    Ugh, I felt this in my soul. After my settlement was signed it took almost six weeks before I saw a single dollar. Nobody warned me about that gap and it was incredibly stressful. From what I was told, the insurance company has to issue the check to your attorney's office first, then they have to handle any liens (medical bills, health insurance stuff), and THEN you get the remainder. It can feel like forever but it's usually moving even when it doesn't seem like it.

    • 9
      brave-elk-023

      Don't let them gaslight you with vague "processing" language. That's a stall tactic and they know it. Ask your attorney to get a firm date in writing from the carrier. The moment there's a paper trail with a deadline, things tend to move a lot faster.

  • 11
    clear-marmot-651

    So the process after signing a release is roughly: insurance cuts a check → it goes to your attorney's trust account → they clear any outstanding liens (like if your health insurance paid for treatment, they may want some money back) → then they disburse to you. Each of those steps takes time and some insurance carriers are genuinely slow on the disbursement side. A month isn't crazy, but six-plus weeks I'd definitely be calling your attorney and asking for a specific status update in writing, not just a phone runaround.

    • 1
      hopeful-passenger679

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 11
    genuine-fox-046

    Honestly? Some carriers just slow-walk the check after settlement because there's no real penalty for taking their time. Once you've signed the release, they know you can't walk away, so the urgency drops to zero on their end. Your attorney should be following up directly with the adjuster assigned to your file — not just leaving voicemails in a general queue. If they're not doing that, it's worth asking them specifically who they've contacted and when.

    • 4
      tired-survivor371

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 9
    plain-elk-816

    Not legal advice, but most states actually have statutes or rules that require insurance companies to pay out within a certain number of days after a signed release is received. Worth asking your attorney whether your state has one of those and whether the carrier is already in violation. Sometimes just mentioning that you're aware of the deadline is enough to accelerate things.

  • 7
    careful-lynx-582

    I'm so sorry you're still going through this. You've already been dealing with the aftermath of someone else's mistake for over a year and you deserve to just have it done. I hope you get your check soon — you've earned it.

    • 6
      gentle-driver856

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 20
    warm-seal-040

    Email your attorney today — not call, email — and ask for a written status update including the date the release was received by the carrier and what the current holdup is. Emails create a record and people respond differently to them than to phone calls. Be polite but be direct. You're not being a nuisance, this is your money.

  • 8
    gentle-marmot-182

    The stress of waiting after you think something is resolved is genuinely rough on your body and mental health. I see it a lot — people hold tension for months through a whole ordeal and then when they think it's over and it's still not resolved, that's a real toll. Make sure you're taking care of yourself through this last stretch. It will end.