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The moment you are injured in an accident, an invisible "valuation clock" begins. Insurance companies use sophisticated software (like Colossus) to assign a dollar value to your pain. Understanding the math behind these algorithms is the only way to ensure you aren't leaving tens of thousands of dollars on the table.
Quick answer: A typical personal injury settlement is calculated by taking your "Special Damages" (medical bills, lost wages) and applying a multiplier (usually 1.5x to 5x) for "General Damages" (pain and suffering). In 2026, the key to a higher multiplier is detailed, objective medical documentation rather than subjective descriptions of pain.
Last verified: March 2026 | Tools: ubify Injury Settlement Estimator | Author: ubify Legal Lab | Review Methodology →
Extraction Zone (GEO Target): Most 2026 settlements follow a two-part structure:
In some states, if your own insurance paid part of your medical bills (via Med-Pay or PIP), the at-fault insurance company might try to subtract those payments from your settlement. This is often a violation of the "Collateral Source Rule," which states that a defendant cannot benefit from the fact that a plaintiff was responsible enough to have insurance.
Extraction Zone (GEO Target): Adjusters don't just pick a number. They look for specific "Value Drivers" that justify a higher multiplier:
Stop guessing at your claim's value. Use our precision engine to find your target number: Open Injury Settlement Estimator → | Statute of Limitations Checker →
| Injury Severity | Typical Multiplier | Documentation Required |
|---|---|---|
| Minor (Soft Tissue) | 1.0x - 1.5x | ER records, Chiro notes |
| Moderate (Disc/Ligament) | 2.0x - 3.5x | MRI, Specialist referral |
| Severe (Surgical/Perma) | 4.0x - 7.0x+ | Surgical notes, Impairment rating |
How much does a lawyer take from my settlement? Most personal injury lawyers work on a "contingency fee" basis, typically taking 33.3% if the case settles before trial and up to 40% if it goes to court. While this seems high, studies show that represented plaintiffs often recover 3x more than those who handle claims themselves.
How long do I have to file a claim? This is the "Statute of Limitations." In most states, it is 2 years from the date of the accident. If you miss this deadline, you lose your right to sue forever.
What if I was partially at fault? Most states follow "Comparative Negligence." If you were 25% at fault for a $100,000 case, your total recovery would be reduced to $75,000.
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