How Medical Bills Work in a Washington Personal Injury Case

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When medical bills come in after a personal injury accident in Washington, most people see one large number and assume that is what everything costs. It isn’t. Your insurer has a contracted rate that is almost always much lower, and the provider writes off the difference. Your attorney claims the full billed amount as your damages because the person who hurt you is responsible for the full cost of your care. But your insurer can only recover what they actually paid, not the written-off amount. Your co-pays and deductibles are yours and the insurer has no claim to them. And if you did not have insurance or PIP going into your accident, you are starting from a much harder position. This post explains how the numbers work and what that means for your settlement.

The Number on Your Bill Is Not the Number That Gets Paid

How medical bills work in a Washington personal injury case is one of the most misunderstood parts of the whole process. After an accident, most people receive bills that look enormous. A single ER visit can show a $12,000 charge. An MRI might show $3,500. It is easy to assume those are the real costs and start panicking about where the money will come from.

Here’s what most people don’t know: those numbers are the hospital’s official full rate, essentially a starting price that almost nobody actually pays. If you have health insurance or PIP coverage, your insurer has already negotiated a much lower contracted rate with that provider. The provider agrees to accept that lower amount as full payment and writes off the rest.

That write-off is called an adjustment, and it happens before you ever see the bill. Here’s what one bill actually looks like when you break it down:

 

What Happens to the Bill

Amount

Hospital’s full billed amount

$10,000

Insurance contractual adjustment (write-off)

-$4,000

Your co-pay or deductible (your out-of-pocket)

$500

What insurance actually paid

 

What your insurer can seek to recover

$5,500

 

$5,500 (not $10,000)

In that example, the hospital billed $10,000 but your insurance company’s contract brought that down to $6,000. Of that $6,000, you paid a $500 co-pay and your insurance paid the remaining $5,500.

What This Means for Your Personal Injury Case

Two things follow from that breakdown that directly affect your settlement. First, your attorney claims the full $10,000 billed amount as part of your damages, not the $5,500 your insurer paid. The person who caused your injury is responsible for the full cost of the care you needed. The fact that your insurance negotiated a discount doesn’t reduce their liability.

Second, your insurer can only seek reimbursement for what they actually paid: $5,500. They cannot claim the $4,000 that was written off. That amount was contractually eliminated. It belongs to no one.

This gap between the full billed amount you claim and the lower amount your insurer recovers is one of the reasons having insurance makes a significant difference to your final outcome.

Washington law also limits how much of that amount your insurer can actually take from your settlement. See your legal protections against reimbursement claims.

What If You Don’t Have Health Insurance or PIP?

Without health insurance or PIP coverage, there’s no contracted rate and no write-off. The provider can bill you their full official rate, which is the highest possible number.

It means an uninsured client without PIP may be looking at a medical bill two or three times higher than what an insured client’s coverage would have negotiated for the exact same care. We can sometimes negotiate those bills down, but we are working from a much higher starting point without the leverage that an insurer’s contract provides.

This is one of the clearest practical reasons why carrying both health insurance and PIP protects you far beyond just having your bills covered in the moment. The contracted rate your insurer has negotiated is quietly saving you money on every bill, whether you realize it or not.

Related: How Your Insurance Type Affects Your Settlement Reimbursement

What About Your Co-Pays and Out-of-Pocket Costs?

“What About My Co-Pays and Out-of-Pocket Costs?”

This is one of the most common questions we get, and the answer is simple: your out-of-pocket costs (co-pays, deductibles, anything you paid directly) are part of your damages and are included in your overall settlement.

You don’t receive a separate reimbursement check for your co-pays. Your settlement is designed to compensate you for everything the injury cost you: the full medical bills, your out-of-pocket payments, lost income, pain and suffering, and any future care you’ll need. It all goes into one number. When your attorney negotiates your settlement, your co-pays and deductibles are part of what’s being recovered.

The insurer’s subrogation claim covers only what they paid, not your portion. Your co-pays and deductibles are yours. The insurer has no claim to them.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does insurance pay the full medical bill after an accident?

No. Your insurer pays the contracted rate they’ve negotiated with the provider, which is almost always significantly lower than the full billed amount. The provider writes off the difference under their contract. Your attorney claims the full billed amount as damages in your case, but your insurer can only seek reimbursement for what they actually paid.

What happens to my co-pays and deductibles in a settlement?

They’re part of your damages and are factored into your overall settlement. You don’t receive a separate check for them. The settlement is designed to compensate you for everything the injury cost you, including your out-of-pocket medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and future care needs. Importantly, your insurer’s reimbursement claim covers only what they paid, not what you paid. Your co-pays and deductibles are yours.

What if I don’t have health insurance or PIP? How does that affect my case?

Without insurance, there’s no contracted rate. The provider can bill their full official rate, which is typically much higher than what an insured patient would owe for the same care. Your medical bills may be two or three times larger as a result. We can sometimes negotiate those bills down, but we are starting from a much higher number. The one upside is that there is no insurance company seeking reimbursement from your settlement. But in most cases the higher bills create a bigger problem than the reimbursement claim would have.

Understanding how the billing numbers work is part of protecting your recovery, not just a background detail. We explain this to every client before a settlement is accepted because we think you should know exactly where your money is going and why. That is what doing it the right way looks like in practice.

Questions about your medical bills or what they mean for your case? Schedule a free consultation. The first conversation is free.

Ready to Protect Your Recovery?

Schedule a free consultation with Scott & Scott, PLLC.

(206) 622-2200

scottlawseattle.com/contact | 4800 Aurora Ave. N., Seattle, WA 98103

Disclaimer: This content is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every case is different. Please consult an experienced personal injury attorney for advice specific to your situation.

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