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How does subrogation actually work when your lawyer takes a cut too? Feeling like I'm losing money

Okay so I'm trying to wrap my head around this and the math is not adding up for me. Maybe someone who's been through this can explain it in plain English because my attorney kind of glossed over it.

Here's my situation: I had a pretty serious back injury from a rear-end collision a few months ago. Required a procedure that my health insurance ended up covering most of. Now I'm in a PI case against the at-fault driver's insurer.

My attorney explained that my health insurance has a subrogation lien — meaning they want to be paid back from whatever I recover. Fine, I get that part conceptually. What I don't get is the math.

So if the total billed amount from the hospital was, say, way more than what my insurer actually paid (because of their negotiated rates), is the lien only based on what they actually paid out, not the sticker price? I assume yes, but nobody has confirmed this clearly.

Then here's where my brain breaks: if the jury or settlement awards me exactly that lien amount for that specific medical expense, my attorney still takes their contingency percentage off the top of the whole settlement. So I'd owe my health insurer the full lien but only have part of what I need after legal fees come out. How does anyone come out ahead on this piece?

I also have some follow-up procedures I still need done. My attorney is nudging me to get them handled now so they're part of the claim. I trust that he's not pushing me toward anything unnecessary — I genuinely need this work done — but I'd be lying if I said I didn't notice that more medical costs = bigger claim = bigger fee for him. Is that cynical of me or is that just reality?

Anyone who's navigated this, please help me understand how this is supposed to work in a way that actually benefits me.

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8 replies

  • 6
    cool-swan-233

    I went through almost this exact confusion last year. The short version my attorney eventually explained: the lien is based on what your insurer actually paid, not the billed amount — so the inflated hospital sticker price is basically irrelevant. The part that stung me was realizing that yes, the contingency fee does bite into the money you need to cover that lien. What saved me was my attorney negotiating the lien down — health insurers will often take less, especially if the total recovery isn't huge. Did your attorney mention lien negotiation at all? That's where you can actually claw some money back.

  • 17
    kind-marmot-997

    So a few things to untangle here. First, yes — the subrogation lien is based on what the insurer actually paid, not the billed charges. The write-off amount is gone, it's not recoverable by anyone.

    Second, the attorney fee question is real and it's one of the messier parts of PI math. A lot of firms will reduce their fee on the liened portion, or will negotiate the lien down as part of their representation — that negotiation is actually part of what you're paying them for. The thing to ask your attorney directly is: does your fee apply to the gross recovery or the net after the lien? Some agreements are structured differently. Get that in writing if you haven't already.

    As for the timing of future procedures — that's a genuinely complicated call and it's worth having an honest conversation with your attorney about the tradeoffs, not just the upsides.

    • 9
      spry-stoat-635

      Not legal advice, and your attorney knows your specific facts way better than anyone here. But generally speaking — the 'made whole' doctrine exists in many states, which essentially says an insurer shouldn't be able to recover their lien if doing so leaves you without full compensation for your losses. Whether that doctrine applies and how strong it is depends entirely on your state law and your plan type. Worth asking your attorney specifically about it. It's not a magic wand but it can matter.

  • 7
    swift-finch-111

    Just want to flag something: your health insurer's subrogation rights aren't always as ironclad as they make them sound. Depending on your plan type (self-funded ERISA plans are a whole different beast), there may be legal arguments that limit what they can actually recover. Don't just accept the lien number as gospel. Push your attorney on this.

    • 13
      cool-bison-528

      On the question of doing the procedures now vs. later — I'd really encourage you to make that call based on your medical situation first, financial strategy second. Delaying necessary procedures can sometimes complicate recovery outcomes or create gaps in the medical record that make it look like the injury wasn't that serious. I've seen that come back to hurt people in claims. If your doctor says you need it, try not to let the lawsuit timing be the main driver.

  • 5
    spry-badger-473

    From the other side of the desk — health insurers send those lien letters automatically and the opening number is almost always their starting position, not their final one. I watched this happen constantly. They'd assert the full paid amount and then settle for a fraction when an attorney pushed back. The ones who didn't have attorneys almost always paid the full lien. So weirdly, having a lawyer who negotiates liens is part of the value even if the contingency fee feels painful in the moment.

  • 17
    hearty-sparrow-428

    Here's the blunt version: yes, the math on the liened portion can feel like you're spinning your wheels. That's not unique to your case, it's a structural issue with how PI contingency fees interact with subrogation. The way you actually come out ahead is (1) getting the lien negotiated down, (2) recovering non-economic damages like pain and suffering where there's no lien eating into it, and (3) making sure future medical costs are well-documented. The economic damages on past medicals are often the least profitable part of a PI case for the plaintiff — the non-economic damages are where recovery tends to outpace costs.

  • 7
    calm-elk-724

    How is your plan structured — is it through an employer self-funded plan or a regular commercial policy? Because that changes everything with subrogation. ERISA self-funded plans have federal preemption and can be much more aggressive about recovering their full lien. Regular state-regulated plans have more wiggle room. If you don't know, find out before assuming the lien is negotiable.