Basierend auf Ihren Eingaben, den Schadensobergrenzen Ihres Bundesstaats und der Verjährungsfrist. Scrollen Sie für die Aufschlüsselung, Verhandlungsstrategie und Ihren Klagefrist-Countdown.
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Geschätzte Gesamtentschädigung
Was bedeutet diese Zahl wirklich?
Anfangsforderung:
Die Obergrenze ist eine vernünftige Eröffnungszahl. Versicherer erwarten, dass Sie hoch ansetzen.
Erstes Angebot des Versicherers:
Typischerweise 30–50% der Untergrenze. Das erste Angebot ist fast immer niedrig.
Endgültiger Vergleich:
Die meisten Fälle werden nahe der Mitte dieser Spanne nach 2–4 Verhandlungsrunden beigelegt.
Wann die Obergrenze realistisch ist:
Schwere Verletzungen mit dauerhaften Folgen, klare Haftung und kompetente rechtliche Vertretung.
Sonderschäden— – —
Anwaltskosten (33)nach Vergleich abgezogen
Nettoerstattung (ca.)— – —
Staat—
Verjährungsfrist—
⚠ Ihr Staat hat eine Obergrenze für nichtwirtschaftliche Schäden. Ihre Schmerzensgeldzahlung kann gesetzlich begrenzt sein.
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Möchten Sie einen detaillierten 10-Abschnitt-Bericht mit Vergleichsstrategie?
30-Sekunden-Entscheidung — beantworten Sie 3 Fragen:
Sind Ihre Verletzungen schwer (Operation, dauerhafte Beeinträchtigung, Krankenhausaufenthalt)?
Ist die Haftung umstritten (Versicherer beschuldigt Sie oder leugnet Schuld)?
Hat der Versicherer abgelehnt oder weniger als die Hälfte der Schätzung angeboten?
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5 Versicherertaktiken zu beachten
Das Schnellangebot.
Ein schnelles Erstangebot (innerhalb 2 Wochen) zielt darauf ab, vor vollständigem medizinischen Bild zu schlichten. Warten Sie bis MMI.
Die Falle der aufgezeichneten Aussage.
Sie sind NICHT verpflichtet, dem Versicherer der schuldigen Partei eine aufgezeichnete Aussage zu geben. "Ich antworte schriftlich" ist Ihre Standardantwort.
Das Vorerkrankungsargument.
Berufen Sie sich auf die Eggshell-Plaintiff-Doktrin — Beklagte haften für das volle Ausmaß der Verletzung, auch bei verletzlichen Klägern. Lassen Sie sich vom Arzt einen Kausalitätsbrief geben.
Die pauschale medizinische Vollmacht.
Unterschreiben Sie nie eine offene medizinische Freigabe. Bestehen Sie auf eine eng begrenzte Freigabe für relevante Anbieter und Daten.
Der "endgültiges Angebot"-Bluff.
Aktenschließung vor Ablauf der Verjährung ist bedeutungslos. Etwa 80% der "endgültigen Angebote" werden innerhalb 2 Wochen nach höflicher Ablehnung erhöht.
Louisiana Personenschadenrecht: Was Sie Wissen Müssen
Fünf rechtliche Fakten, die bestimmen, was Sie in einem Louisiana-Verletzungsanspruch erhalten können. Diese Regeln gelten vor jeder Schätzung durch den Rechner.
Verschuldensregel
Pure Comparative Negligence
Recovery reduced by your % of fault
You can recover even if you were 99% at fault, but your award is reduced by your fault percentage. Most plaintiff-friendly system.
Versicherungssystem
At-Fault / Tort State
You file the claim against the at-fault driver's liability insurance. No PIP requirement; you recover pain & suffering directly without crossing a threshold.
Vorgeschriebene Mindestversicherung
15 K $ / 30 K $ Personenschaden · 25 K $ Sachschaden
Personenschaden (pro Person / pro Unfall) plus Sachschaden. Sie machen den Anspruch gegen die Police des Schuldigen geltend — alles darüber erfordert UM-Deckung oder Zugriff auf Privatvermögen.
Obergrenze für nicht-wirtschaftliche Schäden
$500K
Ihr Schmerzensgeld kann diesen Betrag unabhängig von der Schwere der Verletzung nicht überschreiten.
Verjährungsfrist
1 Jahre ab Verletzungsdatum
Wird diese Frist verpasst, ist der Anspruch endgültig verwirkt — meist keine Ausnahmen. Klage (nicht nur Anspruch) vor Ablauf einreichen, um Rechte zu wahren.
Sources & Legal Citations
Statutes, case law, and official references used to construct this calculator. Always verify with a licensed Louisiana attorney before relying on legal conclusions.
Personal injury cases in Louisiana are filed in the state trial court of the county where the accident occurred, where the defendant resides, or where the defendant’s business is located. Louisiana operates a extremely short 1-year window for personal injury claims — you must file suit (not just submit a claim) before this deadline expires.
Venue strategy: Louisiana's 1.5×–4× multiplier range puts it on the more conservative side of the national distribution — venue selection within Louisiana matters less than in high-multiplier states.
Key rules: Louisiana's pure comparative rule lets claimants recover even at 99% fault — proportionally reduced; $500,000 statutory cap on non-economic damages applies to standard PI cases. No statutory cap on punitive damages (subject to constitutional due-process limits).
Wichtigste Versicherer in Louisiana
Louisiana requires a minimum bodily injury policy of $15K per person / $30K per accident plus $25K property damage. This is well below national norm — even moderate-severity cases routinely exhaust the at-fault driver's minimum policy. The largest national auto carriers active in Louisiana are State Farm, GEICO, Progressive, Allstate, USAA (military only), and Liberty Mutual — each uses different proprietary valuation software (Colossus, Mitchell ClaimIQ, ISO ClaimSearch) with different appetites for litigation.
Because Louisiana's minimum-limit policies cap out so low, the most important first-week action is to identify whether the at-fault driver has only minimum coverage or umbrella coverage. If only minimum, your own underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage may be the larger pool — file a UIM claim with your own carrier in parallel.
Typischer Vergleichszeitplan in Louisiana
Average: 4–12 months for routine cases (the short 1-year SOL forces faster pace).
Louisiana's 1-year SOL is among the shortest nationally — many cases require filing suit protectively at the 9-10 month mark even when settlement talks are active.
The standard 5-phase progression:
Treatment to MMI (LA: usually 3–12 months) — do not settle before Maximum Medical Improvement; future surgeries discovered after settlement come out of your pocket.
Records collection (1–3 months) — hospitals legally have 30 days to respond to HIPAA-compliant requests; some take 60–90.
Negotiation (1–4 months) — 3–5 rounds typical; each round 2–4 weeks because adjusters carry 80–150 active files.
Settlement & payout (4–8 weeks) — sign release → insurer pays into trust → lien negotiations → net to claimant. The 1-year statute of limitations must be respected during all phases; if SOL is approaching, file suit protectively.
Repräsentative Vergleichsspannen nach Verletzung — Louisiana
The following ranges are derived from Louisiana’s typical multiplier (1.5–4×) applied to industry-standard medical bill scenarios. Anonymized to protect privacy; not specific verdicts.
Top multiplier (4×); life-altering impact + vocational expert report
Louisiana non-economic damage cap: $500,000. Applies to pain & suffering and other non-economic damages in standard PI cases. Severe-injury ranges above may be reduced to this ceiling. Medical malpractice and wrongful death are subject to separate statutory limits — see methodology page for case-type breakdown.
Übliche Verteidigungstaktiken in Louisiana
Insurance defense strategies you should anticipate in Louisiana:
Comparative fault to reduce payout. Even in pure comparative Louisiana, every 10% of fault assigned to you cuts your recovery by 10%. Document fault analysis carefully.
Pre-existing condition attack. Defense will pull medical records going back 10+ years to argue your injury existed before the accident. Counter with treating physician causation letter explicitly addressing aggravation of any prior conditions.
Treatment gap exploitation. Any 30+ day gap in medical records is used as proof "you weren’t really hurt." If financial hardship caused gaps, document why in a contemporaneous pain journal.
Policy-limits race. Because Louisiana's minimum auto policy is only $15K per person, multi-claimant accidents (multiple injured occupants) trigger pro-rata reductions. File your demand fast — first credible policy-limits demand often gets full payout.
Delay tactics weaponized. With Louisiana's 1-year SOL, defense routinely stalls negotiations past month 10 hoping you blow the deadline. File suit protectively if no firm offer by month 9.
Independent Medical Examination (IME) request. Insurance-selected physicians routinely document lower severity. You generally must comply if litigation is filed; before then, decline politely citing the request is premature.
Lowball opening offer. Industry standard is 30-50% of internal reserve. Never accept the first offer; respond with documented counter that anchors high.
Wann in Louisiana vor Gericht gehen
Roughly 95% of Louisiana personal injury cases settle without trial. Trial is the right move when:
Insurer’s final offer is more than 30% below your documented damages
Liability is clear and damages are well-documented (favorable jury optics)
Statute of limitations (1 year) is within 6 months — protective filing required
Defendant’s conduct involved gross negligence or willful misconduct (punitive damages potential — Louisiana has no statutory cap on punitives)
Cap watch: Louisiana's $500,000 non-econ cap means a jury verdict above this is automatically reduced. For uncapped severe cases, consider whether economic damages alone justify trial cost.
Trials in Louisiana typically take 12-30 months from filing to verdict, with discovery (depositions, expert reports, motions) occupying most of that time. Filing alone often unlocks better settlement offers — industry data shows settlement values rise 30-50% post-filing.
Pro
Get Your Full Settlement Report
A detailed, attorney-ready PDF with state-specific breakdown, multiplier analysis, and negotiation strategy.
State law content is displayed in English to preserve precise legal terminology. Use your browser’s translation feature for other languages.
If you were injured in Louisiana due to someone else’s negligence, you may be entitled to compensation for both economic damages (medical bills, lost wages) and non-economic damages — commonly known as pain and suffering. Louisiana (LA) personal injury law has its own rules on damage caps, statutes of limitations, and how fault is apportioned. This page explains the key Louisiana-specific factors that affect your settlement, and the calculator above estimates a settlement range using the actual LA multiplier and statutory parameters.
How Pain and Suffering Is Calculated in Louisiana
Louisiana courts and insurance adjusters most commonly use two methods to value non-economic damages:
The Multiplier Method. Your total economic damages (medical bills + lost wages) are multiplied by a factor between 1.5 and 4 for Louisiana cases. Lower multipliers apply to soft-tissue injuries that resolve quickly; higher multipliers apply to severe, permanent, or disfiguring injuries.
The Per Diem Method. A daily dollar value (often the claimant’s daily wage) is multiplied by the number of days from injury to maximum medical improvement. This method works best for shorter recoveries with documented end dates.
The calculator on this page lets you toggle between both methods and adjust the multiplier within the Louisiana range to model different scenarios.
Damage Caps in Louisiana
Louisiana imposes a statutory cap of $500,000 on non-economic damages (including pain and suffering) in certain personal injury cases. The cap may be applied per claimant, per defendant, or per occurrence depending on the case type — verify the specific application with a Louisiana attorney.
Statute of Limitations: 1 year
In Louisiana, you generally have 1 year from the date of the injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. Missing this deadline almost always means losing your right to compensation entirely, regardless of how strong your case is on the merits.
Important exceptions and nuances that may affect the deadline in Louisiana:
Discovery rule — In some cases (e.g., toxic exposure, medical malpractice), the clock starts when you knew or should have known of the injury, not the date of the underlying event.
Minors — The 1 year clock typically does not begin running for an injured minor until they turn 18.
Government claims — If your claim is against a city, county, or state agency, separate notice deadlines (often 60–180 days) apply before you can file suit. These are much shorter than the standard limit.
Wrongful death — A separate statute of limitations may apply, calculated from the date of death rather than the date of injury.
Louisiana’s Fault Rule: Pure Comparative Negligence
Louisiana follows the pure comparative negligence rule. You can recover damages even if you are 99% at fault — your award is simply reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if your damages total $100,000 and you are found 30% at fault, you would recover $70,000.
This is one of the most consequential rules in Louisiana personal injury law. Insurance adjusters routinely try to assign a percentage of fault to the claimant in order to reduce or eliminate the payout. Documenting your case carefully and limiting recorded statements to the at-fault party’s insurer are key defensive practices.
Typical Settlement Ranges in Louisiana
Settlement values vary widely based on injury severity, liability strength, and insurance limits. The following ranges reflect typical Louisiana outcomes for the categories shown — your actual settlement may be higher or lower:
Minor injuries (soft tissue, full recovery within weeks): $8,800 – $19,800
Severe injuries (surgery, disability, permanent impairment): $108,000 – $360,000+
Louisiana Auto Insurance Minimums
If your injury arose from a motor vehicle accident, the at-fault driver’s insurance is the primary source of recovery. Louisiana requires drivers to carry minimum liability coverage of:
$15,000 per person for bodily injury
$30,000 per accident for bodily injury
$25,000 for property damage
Louisiana is a fault-based / tort liability state. You may pursue the at-fault driver and their insurer directly for both economic damages and pain and suffering — there is no statutory injury threshold required.
If the at-fault driver carries only the state minimum (or is uninsured), your recovery may be limited to those amounts unless you can pursue your own underinsured/uninsured motorist coverage.
How to File a Personal Injury Claim in Louisiana
Document the scene immediately. Photographs, witness contact information, and a written record of what happened are far harder to gather later.
Get medical attention promptly. Gaps in treatment are routinely used by insurance adjusters to argue that the injury was not serious or was unrelated to the incident.
Notify the at-fault party’s insurer in writing. Be brief and factual. Avoid recorded statements without an attorney.
Calculate your damages. Use this Louisiana calculator to estimate a fair pain-and-suffering range based on your medical bills, lost wages, and severity. Keep itemized receipts.
Send a demand letter. A demand letter formally states your version of the facts, your damages, and the amount you will accept to settle.
Negotiate — or file suit before the 1 year deadline. Most claims settle, but you must file a lawsuit before the statute of limitations expires to preserve your right to recover.
Should You Hire a Louisiana Personal Injury Attorney?
Studies by the Insurance Research Council have consistently found that represented claimants recover roughly 3.5× more on average than unrepresented claimants — even after attorney fees. Most Louisiana personal injury attorneys work on contingency (typically 33% of recovery, sometimes 40% if the case goes to trial), which means no upfront cost.
Cases where representation is especially valuable in Louisiana:
Disputed liability (especially under Pure Comparative Negligence)
Severe or permanent injuries
Multiple defendants or insurance carriers
Government defendants (with their shorter notice deadlines)
Insurance company is denying the claim or offering far less than the calculator’s estimate
This page provides general information about Louisiana personal injury law and is not legal advice. Outcomes vary by case and the rules above may have changed. Consult a licensed Louisiana attorney for advice on your specific situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Louisiana courts and adjusters most commonly use the multiplier method (economic damages × 1.5 – 4 based on injury severity) or the per diem method (a daily dollar value × number of recovery days). The calculator on this page implements both methods using Louisiana-specific multiplier ranges.
Yes. Louisiana caps non-economic damages (pain and suffering) at $500,000 in certain personal injury cases. The cap may apply per claimant, per defendant, or per occurrence — the specific application depends on the case type. Economic damages (medical bills, lost wages) are not subject to this cap.
The general statute of limitations for personal injury claims in Louisiana is 1 year from the date of injury. Exceptions may apply for minors, claims against government entities (which usually have much shorter notice deadlines), and cases where the injury was not immediately discoverable.
Under Louisiana’s pure comparative negligence rule, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault — but you can still recover even if you are 99% at fault. For example, if your damages total $100,000 and you are 30% at fault, you would recover $70,000.
Not always — minor claims with clear liability and limited damages can often be handled directly with the insurer. However, statistics consistently show that represented claimants recover roughly 3.5× more on average, even after attorney fees. Louisiana personal injury attorneys typically work on contingency, meaning no upfront cost. Strongly consider representation for severe injuries, disputed liability, or cases where the insurer is denying or lowballing the claim.