After a serious accident, one of the first questions most people have is: “How much is my case worth?” The answer depends on a variety of factors, including the severity of your injuries, the amount of available insurance coverage, and how your life has been affected.
Insurance companies often downplay claims to pay out as little as possible. But an experienced personal injury attorney can accurately calculate your claim’s true value and fight to make sure you’re fairly compensated.
At McWhirter, Bellinger & Associates, we’ve been helping injured South Carolinians understand and recover the full value of their claims for more than 40 years. Here’s what goes into determining what your personal injury case is really worth.
1. Understanding the Goal of a Personal Injury Claim
The purpose of a personal injury claim is to make you “whole again”—to compensate you for the losses caused by someone else’s negligence. While no amount of money can undo an accident or erase pain, financial recovery helps cover the costs of medical treatment, lost wages, and the emotional and physical toll you’ve endured.
Personal injury damages generally fall into two main categories:
- Economic (financial) damages, which can be measured in dollars, and
- Non-economic (human) damages, which represent pain, suffering, and loss of quality of life.
2. Calculating Economic Damages
Economic damages are the easiest part of a claim to measure because they’re based on real expenses and financial losses. Your attorney will gather documentation such as medical bills, pay stubs, and receipts to support these damages.
Common types of economic damages include:
Medical Expenses
This includes ambulance rides, emergency room care, hospital stays, surgeries, follow-up appointments, rehabilitation, prescription medications, medical equipment, and physical therapy.
If your injuries require ongoing care, you can also claim future medical expenses, which are estimated based on your doctors’ opinions and expert projections.
Lost Wages and Earning Capacity
If you missed work while recovering, you’re entitled to recover the income you lost during that period.
For serious or long-term injuries, you may also recover damages for loss of future earning capacity. The difference between what you could have earned before the accident and what you can reasonably earn now.
Property Damage
In vehicle accident cases, you can claim the cost of repairing or replacing your car and any personal property damaged in the crash.
Out-of-Pocket Expenses
Other reimbursable costs might include transportation to medical appointments, home modifications (such as ramps or special showers), and help with household chores you can no longer perform.
3. Calculating Non-Economic Damages
Non-economic damages compensate for the human impact of your injuries like the pain, suffering, and emotional strain that can’t be shown on a receipt. These damages vary from person to person, making them harder to calculate but often far more significant.
Non-economic damages include:
- Physical pain and discomfort
- Emotional distress and anxiety
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Scarring or disfigurement
- Loss of companionship or intimacy
- Permanent disability or impairment
Insurance companies often try to minimize these damages or use one-size-fits-all formulas to undervalue them. That’s why having a skilled attorney who knows how to present the full extent of your suffering is essential.
4. The “Multiplier” and “Per Diem” Methods
Although every case is unique, attorneys and insurers often use general frameworks to estimate pain and suffering damages.
Multiplier Method
This method multiplies your total economic damages by a number depending on the severity and permanence of your injuries.
- Minor, short-term injuries might use a lower multiplier.
- Severe, long-term, or disabling injuries might justify a higher multiplier.
Per Diem Method
This approach assigns a daily value to your pain and suffering, multiplied by the number of days you experience pain or limitations.
Both methods are merely starting points—an experienced lawyer will customize the calculation based on the specifics of your life, recovery, and prognosis.
5. Factors That Affect Claim Value
Several important factors influence how much your personal injury claim is worth:
- Severity of your injuries: Catastrophic injuries such as brain damage, spinal cord injuries, or amputations result in much higher damages than minor sprains or bruises.
- Length of recovery: The longer your recovery period, the higher your potential claim value.
- Permanent disability or impairment: Lifelong conditions greatly increase compensation for pain and suffering.
- Comparative fault: In South Carolina, if you’re partially at fault for your accident, your compensation may be reduced by your percentage of fault.
- Available insurance coverage: Your recovery is limited by the policy limits of the at-fault party’s insurance unless additional coverage applies (such as underinsured motorist coverage) or additional personal assets may be recovered.
- Consistency of your medical records: Gaps in treatment or inconsistent reporting can give insurers ammunition to undervalue your claim.
- Credibility: Insurance adjusters and juries pay attention to how believable and consistent you are throughout the case.
6. Why Online Settlement Calculators Are Misleading
You might come across “personal injury settlement calculators” online that promise to estimate your claim value. These tools are highly unreliable because they can’t account for critical factors such as:
- The full extent of your pain and limitations
- The strength of your evidence
- Local jury verdict trends
- Future damages or medical costs
- How well your attorney presents your case
Every personal injury claim is unique. Only an experienced lawyer who understands South Carolina law and your specific situation can provide a realistic estimate.
7. The Role of an Experienced Attorney
Calculating the value of your claim isn’t just about math—it’s about strategy. An experienced personal injury attorney will:
- Gather and analyze all relevant medical records, bills, and wage documentation
- Consult medical and vocational experts to assess long-term needs
- Identify all sources of insurance coverage
- Factor in future damages and non-economic losses
- Negotiate aggressively with insurance companies
- File a lawsuit if the insurer refuses to offer a fair settlement
At McWhirter, Bellinger & Associates, we’ve spent decades dealing with insurance companies that try to minimize payouts. We know their tactics—and we know how to fight back to pursue the full value our clients deserve.
8. When to Call a Lawyer
If you’ve been injured in a car wreck, slip and fall, work accident, or any situation caused by someone else’s negligence, you shouldn’t try to calculate your damages or handle negotiations on your own. The insurance company has teams of adjusters and attorneys working against you.
The sooner you contact an attorney, the better. Early legal representation ensures that evidence is preserved, deadlines are met, and you’re protected from saying or doing anything that could harm your claim’s value.
9. Get a Free Case Evaluation
The attorneys at McWhirter, Bellinger & Associates have helped thousands of accident victims across South Carolina recover fair compensation for their injuries. We’ll review your case for free, explain your options, and fight for every dollar you’re entitled to.
It won’t cost you anything to see if we can help. Call 803-LAW-FIRM or contact us online today to schedule your free consultation.















