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tidy-swift-995

Did my PI lawyer just phone it in? Settlement feels way too low compared to my coworker's

So I settled my injury claim a few months back and I honestly can't stop second-guessing myself about it. Here's what's eating at me.

A coworker of mine got rear-ended around the same time I did. Similar situation — both of us had soft tissue injuries, both did a bunch of physical therapy, both missed some work. Our recoveries were pretty comparable from what we talked about. The difference? Her settlement was dramatically higher than mine. We're talking a completely different ballpark.

Looking back at how my attorney handled things, there were a few red flags I kind of brushed off at the time:

  • Every time I pushed back on the insurance company's offer, my lawyer would come back and say something like "this is probably as good as it gets, let's just close it out"
  • I'd go weeks without hearing anything unless I reached out first
  • When I asked questions, the responses felt rushed and canned

I went with this firm partly because a billboard ad made them seem like a big operation, and their contingency fee was lower than a couple other firms I talked to. I figured that was a win. Now I'm not so sure a lower fee matters much if the settlement itself is smaller.

I'm mostly venting but I do have genuine questions:

1. Is it actually a known thing that high-volume firms churn through cases faster at lower values? 2. How much does the individual attorney's hustle actually affect the outcome? 3. My brother was a passenger in my car and he's still treating — hasn't settled yet. What should he watch out for so he doesn't end up feeling like I do?

Thanks for any thoughts. Still kinda stings.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 3
    calm-owl-659

    Ugh, this hit close to home. I went through something almost identical — picked a firm based on a low fee and ended up feeling like I was just a case number. My calls would get passed to a paralegal, and whenever I pushed for more the response was always some version of 'let's be realistic.' I'll never make that decision the same way again. The percentage means nothing if the base number is low.

  • 15
    bright-finch-430

    Yes, high-volume firms are absolutely a thing. Adjusters know which firms settle fast and which ones will actually fight. If your attorney has a reputation for closing cases quickly without going to litigation, the insurance company knows they can lowball and it'll probably stick. It's kind of an open secret.

  • 15
    genuine-beaver-807

    I'll be real with you — from the inside, we absolutely tracked which law firms would push back hard versus which ones folded. Firms with massive case loads often just want to move inventory. If a file sat too long it messed with their cash flow. I'm not saying every big firm is like this, but it's more common than people realize. Your instinct here isn't paranoia.

  • 14
    quick-tern-298

    To answer your first two questions directly: yes, case volume can absolutely affect outcomes, and the individual attorney's attention and strategy matters a lot. Some firms have one experienced attorney who barely touches your file while junior staff handles everything. As for your brother — tell him to make sure he doesn't settle until he has a clear picture of his future treatment needs, not just what's happened so far. Settling too early before max medical improvement is one of the biggest mistakes people make.

  • 14
    mellow-owl-975

    Not legal advice, but to your questions: attorney selection genuinely can influence outcomes in ways that are hard to quantify but very real — willingness to litigate, negotiation style, how well they document damages. For your brother, the most important thing right now is that he doesn't let anyone pressure him into settling while he's still actively treating. Demand documentation of everything, and don't assume the first few offers reflect what a case is actually worth.

  • 11
    steady-elk-298

    I'd push back a little — do you actually know the details of your coworker's case? Like, was the at-fault driver's policy limit different? Did she have better documentation? Same injuries can look very different on paper depending on how they were treated and recorded. Not saying your frustration isn't valid, just that the comparison might be missing some pieces.

  • 13
    steady-sparrow-831

    For your brother specifically — please make sure he keeps every appointment and doesn't skip PT even when he feels better. Gap in treatment is one of the first things that gets used to minimize a claim. Also, if any new symptoms show up (radiating pain, headaches, anything new) he needs to tell his doctor immediately and get it documented. The medical record is the claim.

    • 9
      kind-elk-785

      For your brother: interview at least three attorneys before picking one. Ask each of them directly how many cases they personally handle at once and how often they go to litigation versus settle. The answers will tell you a lot. And skip the billboards.

  • 4
    quiet-swan-145

    I'm sorry you're going through this. The feeling of wondering 'did I leave money on the table' sounds genuinely stressful, especially when you're comparing notes with someone you know. I hope your brother takes the advice here seriously — at least one good thing can come out of your experience if he benefits from it.