How Does an Injury Lawyer Work in Los Angeles? A Complete Guide

Personal injury lawyers in Los Angeles typically do five key things. They evaluate your case for free and tell you whether it’s worth pursuing. They get you to doctors who treat you on a lien so you can heal without paying out of pocket. They lock down evidence before it disappears, calculate what your case is actually worth, and on the back end, they push the settlement up and cut your medical liens down so you walk away with more of the money.
Most clients only ever see the first one. The other four happen in the background, and the gap between represented and unrepresented outcomes is where they live.
Conclusiones principales
- California personal injury lawyers work on contingency. No fee unless they win. The standard rate runs 33% to 40%, and the agreement has to be in writing under Business and Professions Code § 6147.
- Most California PI (personal injury) clients get medical care long before any settlement money exists. Doctors, physical therapists, chiropractors, pain management specialists, and mental health providers commonly treat on a lien basis, getting paid out of the eventual recovery.
- Insurance Research Council closed-claim data covering tens of thousands of auto injury claims has shown for decades that represented claimants recover roughly 3.5 times more than unrepresented ones, even after attorney fees come out.
- The LA Superior Court phased out its Personal Injury Hub in early 2024. New Central District PI cases now go to Independent Calendar departments at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse, with a single judge handling the file from start to finish.
1. They Take Your Case for Free and Tell You What You Have
The first call costs nothing. Almost every PI firm in California works that way. No commitment, no charge if the firm decides not to take it.
What the lawyer is doing on that call is a quiet evaluation. They’re listening for the basics. What happened? Who was driving? Who has insurance? What got hurt? How soon did you see a doctor? They’re also asking themselves whether the case has enough realistic value to be worth working under contingency, because if there’s no recovery, there’s no fee for them either.
Some cases get politely declined. A minor fender-bender with no real medical treatment isn’t a personal injury case in any practical sense, and a good lawyer will say so directly instead of stringing you along. Other cases get accepted same-day, especially when liability is clear and injuries are serious.
The financial structure is contingent. The lawyer’s fee comes out of whatever they recover. Nothing up front. Nothing during the case. Nothing if you lose. The standard rate runs 33% to 40% of the gross recovery, with the higher end usually kicking in if the case has to be filed as a lawsuit. Bus. & Prof. Code § 6147 spells out exactly what has to be in the contract: the percentage, how disbursements and costs are handled, and a few other disclosures. Skip the writing, and the agreement is voidable at the client’s option, which is why firms put it in writing the right way.
2. They Get You to Doctors Who Treat You on a Lien
This is where the practice of personal injury law in Los Angeles does some of its most useful work. After a serious accident, the people who most need a lawyer are also the people least able to pay for the medical care that proves their case. Health insurance helps if you have it. Plenty of people don’t, and even insured patients face copays and deductibles they can’t cover when they can’t work.
A personal injury firm with an established LA-area network connects clients to providers who treat on a lien basis. Doctors. Orthopedic specialists. Physical therapists. Chiropractors. Pain management. Acupuncturists. Mental health professionals. The provider agrees to wait for payment until the case settles. No money out of pocket while you’re healing.
The legal mechanism is California’s Hospital Lien Act, plus the broader practice of physician liens that have grown since 2011. Plaintiff Magazine has tracked the trend in California PI for years, noting that an increasing number of physicians and other providers now treat on a lien basis specifically to serve injured plaintiffs.
There’s a wrinkle in how medical damages get calculated. Under Howell v. Hamilton Meats, you can only recover what was actually paid for your medical care, not what was billed. So if a hospital bills $50,000 and your insurance pays $18,000 as the contracted rate, you can recover the $18,000 in damages. Lien-based providers know this and price their services accordingly.
The treatment record is also the legal evidence. Every PT note, every MRI report, every psych intake form is a document the case relies on later. Getting the right care isn’t only medical; it’s how the case gets built.
3. They Lock Down Evidence Before It Disappears
While you’re focused on healing, the firm is doing work you’ll never see. Most of it happens in the first two weeks.
Spoliation letters go out first. These are formal demands sent to the at-fault driver, their insurance company, any business that may have surveillance footage, and any other entity holding evidence. They put recipients on notice that relevant evidence has to be preserved. If it gets destroyed after that letter goes out, California courts can instruct juries to assume the destroyed evidence would have hurt the destroying party. The instruction is CACI 204, drawn from the California Supreme Court’s reasoning in Cedars-Sinai v. Superior Court.
Surveillance footage is the most time-sensitive piece. Plenty of small businesses and gas stations across LA run loop systems that overwrite themselves within 24 to 72 hours. By the time you’ve finished a first round of doctor visits, that footage is gone unless someone moved fast.
Beyond evidence, the firm is pulling the police report, identifying and interviewing witnesses, checking the at-fault party’s insurance policy limits, and starting to map what the case actually looks like. For serious cases, accident reconstructionists may visit the scene. For commercial vehicle cases, the company’s safety records get subpoenaed. For traumatic brain injury or spinal cases, life-care planners come in early. The case file fills up while you’re at physical therapy.
4. They Calculate What Your Case Is Actually Worth
Two categories of damages. Economic and non-economic.
Economic damages are the dollars-and-cents losses. Past medical bills, calculated under Howell at the actually-paid amount. Future medical care, including surgeries you’ll need that haven’t happened yet. Ongoing physical therapy. Medications. Equipment. Home modifications. Lost wages. Lost earning capacity if your injury permanently changes what you can do for work.
Non-economic (dolor y sufrimiento) damages cover the harder-to-price losses. Pain. Emotional distress. The fact that you can’t pick up your toddler anymore. The fact that you can’t sleep without medication. California uses no fixed formula for this category, and juries are explicitly told to use their judgment. Lawyers and adjusters typically use a multiplier method, taking economic damages and multiplying by a factor that reflects severity. Soft tissue might run 1.5x to 2x. Permanent injuries can run 4x to 5x or higher.
A first offer from an adjuster is almost always less than what the case can actually carry. The reason is structural. Adjusters use automated valuation software that produces conservative baselines. They have settlement authority limits that get raised once a represented attorney is on file. The first number reflects the lower bound of the carrier’s range, not the case’s real value.
5. They Negotiate With Insurance and Cut Your Liens at the End
This is where the gap shows up.
Insurance Research Council data, drawn from closed-claim studies in their long-running Auto Injury Insurance Claims series, has consistently shown that represented claimants recover roughly 3.5 times more than unrepresented ones, even after attorney fees come out. That’s the insurance industry’s own research, published so their carriers can use it internally. They know representation costs them more.
Here’s how it works in practice.
When a claim comes in without an attorney, adjusters typically route it to junior staff with limited settlement authority – often capped between $25,000 and $50,000. Represented claims go to senior adjusters with significantly broader authority. Beyond that, attorneys force a level of documentation that an adjuster’s software simply doesn’t generate on its own. Future medical costs get supported by life-care planners. Lost earning capacity gets supported by economists. And pain and suffering multipliers increase because the case now carries a credible threat of litigation if the offer doesn’t move. Insurance carriers weigh litigation costs against paying a fair number – and the math usually favors paying.
Then there’s what happens after settlement.
Hospitals, health insurers, Medi-Cal, and Medicare all have the right to recover their costs through liens on your settlement. California Civil Code § 3040 caps health insurance liens at one-third of the settlement when you have a lawyer, versus one-half when you don’t. Hospital liens cap at 50% of the net settlement after attorney fees and costs come out. Medi-Cal liens get reduced under a statutory formula in Welfare and Institutions Code § 14124.72. The lawyer doesn’t just get a bigger gross number; they keep more of it on the way out. There’s a full breakdown of lien negotiation on our blog if you want to go deeper on this piece.
What Happens If Your Case Has to Go to Court in LA?
Most cases never see a courtroom. The vast majority of personal injury cases settle before trial, and even those filed as lawsuits usually settle once discovery forces both sides to put their cards on the table. Filing a lawsuit and going to trial are two different things.
The LA Superior Court used to route every Central District personal injury case through a specialized PI Hub at the Spring Street Courthouse. That ended on January 8, 2024. New Central District PI cases now go to Independent Calendar departments at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse, with a single judge handling the file from filing through trial. Cases now move with consistent judicial oversight, rather than being bounced between hub courts and trial courts on different schedules.
One LA-specific deadline worth knowing. If your accident involves any public entity (Metro, LADOT, Caltrans, an LA County vehicle, or the City of LA), you don’t have the standard timeline. You have six months to file a government claim under Gov Code § 911.2 before you can sue. Miss that, and the case is usually finished. This catches a lot of people who don’t realize a Metro bus crash isn’t legally the same kind of case as a private-vehicle crash.
Preguntas frecuentes
How Much Will I Actually Take Home From a $25,000 Settlement?
Depends on the contingency rate, costs, and any liens. Rough math on a $25,000 settlement at 33.3% contingency with $1,000 in case costs: $8,333 to the lawyer, $1,000 reimbursed for costs, $15,667 left over before liens. If you have a $5,000 health insurance lien capped at the represented one-third rate, you take home around $10,667 net. The number moves significantly based on whether you have private insurance, Medicare, or Medi-Cal coverage.
What Should I Never Say to an Insurance Adjuster?
“It was my fault.” Even partially. Don’t apologize on the phone. Don’t speculate about how the accident happened. Don’t agree to a recorded statement before talking to a lawyer. Adjusters are trained to elicit damaging admissions in the first call, and California’s pure comparative fault rule means any percentage of fault assigned to you reduces your recovery by that percentage.
How Long Do I Have to File a Personal Injury Case in California?
Two years from the date of injury for most cases involving private parties. Six months if a public entity is involved. Narrow exceptions exist for delayed-discovery injuries and for minors, where the clock can pause until age 18. Don’t rely on the exceptions. The deadlines are unforgiving, and most attempts to file late get rejected.
Talk to a Los Angeles Personal Injury Lawyer
Personal injury cases in Los Angeles have more moving parts than most people realize. The free case evaluation, the medical treatment on a lien, the evidence preservation, the damages calculation, and the settlement and lien negotiation all happen in sequence – on different timelines and with different leverage points.
Getting an attorney involved early protects the full value of what your case is worth before evidence disappears, statements get made, or early settlement offers get accepted. If you’ve been injured in Los Angeles and want to understand what your case is actually worth, comuníquese con DK Law para una consulta gratuita.
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El tiempo es importante después de un accidente
Cuanto antes hables con un abogado después de un accidente, más sólido puede ser su reclamo. Actuar pronto ayuda a preservar la evidencia y a proteger sus derechos.
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