How Long Does a Personal Injury Settlement Take in 2026?
The short answer: a typical personal injury settlement takes 6 to 18 months from the date of injury to receiving a check. Simple soft-tissue cases with clear liability can close in 90 days. Complex cases involving surgery, contested fault, or commercial defendants routinely run 18-36 months.
Settlement Timeline by Case Type
| Case Type | Typical Range | Drives Length |
|---|---|---|
| Rear-end fender bender, no injury | 30–90 days | Property damage only |
| Soft tissue / whiplash, recovered | 3–6 months | Wait for medical resolution |
| Broken bone, no surgery | 6–12 months | Healing + records collection |
| Surgery required | 12–24 months | MMI determination |
| TBI / spinal / catastrophic | 18–36 months | Future medical needs |
| Contested liability | Add 6+ months | Investigation / depositions |
| Commercial defendant (truck, rideshare) | Add 6+ months | Multiple insurers, FMCSA records |
The 5-Phase Timeline Most Cases Follow
Phase 1: Medical Treatment (Day 1 – MMI)
You should not settle until you reach Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) — the point where further treatment won’t meaningfully change your condition. Settling early and discovering you need surgery six months later means absorbing that cost yourself.
Phase 2: Records Collection (1–3 months)
Your attorney (or you) requests bills, charts, imaging, and lost wage documentation. Hospitals legally have 30 days to respond; some take 60-90.
Phase 3: Demand Letter (1 month)
A written demand letter packages your damages and asks for a specific number. The insurer typically responds in 30-45 days with either a counter-offer or denial.
Phase 4: Negotiation (1–4 months)
Most cases settle in 3-5 rounds of back-and-forth. Each round takes 2-4 weeks because adjusters carry 80-150 active files.
Phase 5: Settlement & Payout (4–8 weeks)
After agreement: sign release → insurer issues check (2-4 weeks) → check clears trust account → liens negotiated and paid → you receive net proceeds.
What Slows Settlements Down
- Pre-existing conditions: insurer will argue your back pain is from old age, not the accident. Requires medical expert to apportion.
- Gap in treatment: any 30+ day gap in your medical records gets used as proof you weren’t really hurt.
- Multiple defendants: truck accident with driver + carrier + cargo loader = three insurers each waiting for the others.
- Policy limits issues: if your damages exceed coverage, insurer may delay hoping you’ll accept the limit.
- Statute of limitations crunch: filing a lawsuit forces movement but resets the clock to 12-24 months.
When to Stop Negotiating and File Suit
Sue when: (1) the statute of limitations is within 6 months, (2) the insurer has stopped responding for 60+ days, (3) the gap between their offer and your bottom line is more than 30%, or (4) liability is being denied entirely. Filing doesn’t kill negotiations — most filed cases still settle, but with you holding the leverage.
Use the calculator to set your bottom line, then time your demand to land 6-12 months out from the SOL deadline.