South Carolina Personal Injury Lawyers

Should I Accept a Settlement Offer From the Insurance Company?

May 4, 2026

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If you’ve been involved in a car accident in Lexington, SC, and have received a settlement offer from the insurance company, you may be tempted to accept it and move on. You’re facing medical bills, possibly missing work, and the stress of recovery. While accepting a check might seem easy, it’s crucial to understand what that offer truly includes, what it omits, and what rights you might be sacrificing.

At Smith & Jones Law, our car accident lawyers offer free consultations and work on a contingency fee basis, which means you don’t pay us unless we recover compensation for you. Call our Lexington office at 803-784-0730 to have your offer reviewed before you make a decision you cannot undo.

Why the First Settlement Offer Is Almost Always a Lowball

Insurance companies are businesses. Their goal is to pay as little as possible on every claim. The first offer you receive is rarely a fair reflection of what your case is actually worth.

Here’s why timing matters. Insurance adjusters often reach out quickly, sometimes within days of the accident. They’re hoping to settle before you’ve had time to understand the full extent of your injuries, consult an attorney, or calculate the true cost of your accident. They know that once you’re informed, the number goes up. So they move fast, offer a number that sounds reasonable on the surface, and hope you’ll accept it.

What the First Offer Usually Does (and Doesn’t) Cover

A first settlement offer from the insurance company may cover some of your initial medical expenses. It might even reference a few days of lost wages. But here’s what it typically leaves out:

  • Future medical treatment, such as physical therapy, surgeries, and follow-up appointments
  • Long-term lost wages or reduced earning capacity
  • Pain and suffering
  • Emotional distress
  • Out-of-pocket expenses related to your recovery

These are real costs, and they add up. If you accept an offer that only accounts for your emergency room visit but ignores the six months of physical therapy ahead, you’re leaving money on the table.

How to Evaluate Whether a Settlement Offer Is Fair

Before you consider accepting any offer, ask yourself these questions.

Have you reached maximum medical improvement (MMI)? MMI is the point at which your doctor says your condition has stabilized and that further treatment won’t significantly improve it. Until you reach MMI, you don’t truly know what your injuries will cost. Accepting a settlement before that point is a guess, and guessing usually works in the insurance company’s favor.

Are all your medical bills accounted for? This includes past bills, current treatment, and projected future care. Don’t forget prescription costs, medical devices, and rehabilitation.

Have you factored in lost wages? If your injuries kept you from working (or will in the future), that lost income should be part of your settlement. The same goes for reduced earning capacity if you cannot return to the same type of work.

What about pain and suffering? South Carolina law allows injured individuals to seek compensation for physical pain, emotional distress, and the overall impact the accident has had on their quality of life. This is real, compensable harm, and it’s often the largest part of a fair settlement.

If you cannot confidently answer all of these questions, the offer isn’t ready to be accepted. Call Smith & Jones Law at 803-784-0730 for a free case evaluation. We’ll help you understand what your claim is truly worth.

The Risk of Accepting Too Early

This is the part most people don’t realize until it’s too late. When you accept a settlement, you sign a release that permanently closes your claim. You cannot go back and ask for more money, even if your injuries turn out to be far worse than you initially thought.

Imagine accepting a $10,000 settlement, then learning three months later that you need surgery. That surgery could cost tens of thousands of dollars, and you’d have no legal recourse to recover those costs. The insurance company knows this, and it’s exactly why they push early offers.

How to Reject an Offer and Negotiate

You’re never required to accept the first offer. If you believe the amount is too low (and it usually is), you can reject it and begin the negotiation process.

Typically, this involves sending a demand letter that outlines your injuries, medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and the total amount you believe your claim is worth. The insurance company will likely respond with a counteroffer, and negotiations will continue from there.

This is where having an experienced attorney makes a significant difference. Insurance adjusters negotiate claims every day. They know the tactics, the pressure points, and the language that gets people to settle for less. With 35 years of combined experience, our attorneys at Smith & Jones Law know those tactics, too, and how to push back effectively.

How South Carolina’s Comparative Negligence Rule Affects Your Settlement

South Carolina uses a modified comparative negligence model with a greater than 50% % bar. In plain terms, you can recover damages as long as your fault is not greater than 50%. If you are found to be greater than 50% at fault, you recover nothing.

Why does this matter for settlement negotiations? Because insurance companies will try to shift blame onto you to reduce the value of your claim. Even if they cannot prove you were mostly at fault, arguing that you were 20% or 30% responsible directly reduces the amount they must pay. An experienced attorney can anticipate these arguments and build a case that protects your recovery.

What Happens if Negotiation Fails

If the insurance company refuses to offer a fair settlement, you have the right to file a lawsuit. South Carolina has a three-year statute of limitations for personal injury lawsuits, including those arising from car accidents. Under S.C. Code Ann. § 15-3-530, most actions for injury to the person must be commenced within three years. However, a shorter statute of limitations applies for lawsuits against certain entities and employees, such as governmental entities and employees.

Three years might sound like plenty of time, but building a strong case takes months of investigation, evidence gathering, and negotiation. Don’t wait until the deadline is approaching to take action.

Get Your Settlement Offer Reviewed for Free

The insurance company isn’t looking out for you. They’re trying to close your claim as cheaply and quickly as possible. Before you accept any settlement offer after a car accident in Lexington or anywhere in South Carolina, talk to someone who’s on your side.

Smith & Jones Law has over 35 years of combined experience handling car accident cases throughout South Carolina. We’ll review your offer, tell you honestly whether it’s fair, and work to recover the full compensation you’re entitled to if it’s not.

Your consultation is free, and you don’t pay us unless we win. Call our Lexington office at 803-784-0730 today, or visit us at 5044 Augusta Rd., Lexington, SC 29072. We also have an office in Mauldin for your convenience.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is different and depends on its unique facts. Contact us today to learn more.

Frequently Asked Questions

Our experienced team is dedicated to guiding you through the legal process and fighting for the justice you deserve.
How Do I Know If I Have a Case?

Generally, personal injury cases are based on someone else being at fault for an accident. It can be a person, a company, or another legal entity that has fault.

You might think that someone else needs to have hurt you on purpose to get compensation. That isn’t true! Most personal injury claims are based on negligence. Negligence just means being careless in an unreasonable way. That’s one basis for a case, but there are several different grounds for personal injury compensation. Our lawyers will explore all the ways you may qualify.

The best way to know if you have a case is to ask us for a free no-obligation consultation!

How Much Time Do I Have to File A Lawsuit?

It depends. Generally, the maximum time to file a personal injury case in South Carolina is three years. However, there are exceptions, and it can be much shorter. There are some circumstances where the timeline may be extended, too, but you should never count on this. If you miss the deadline that applies in your case, it usually means there is no way to pursue compensation.

There are things you can do right now to protect your rights and build your case. You should always contact a lawyer as soon as possible. Don’t assume that you can wait – and don’t assume you’ve waited too long, either. We’ll determine how much time you have and work quickly to pursue your case.

How Will My Lawyer Determine the Value of My Case?

Your lawyer determines the value of your case with a multi-step process. First, they total your damages. These are the losses that you are allowed to claim by law. It starts with direct, financial losses like medical expenses, lost income, and property loss. But your damages are much more than that. You may also receive compensation for physical suffering, mental health injury and emotional anguish. Our lawyers look at all the categories.

There are other factors that may influence your compensation award. The strength of the legal case and ways to collect compensation are two examples. At your consultation, we can estimate the case value, plus explain what needs to happen for you to receive the maximum award.

What Steps Should I Take Immediately After an Injury to Protect My Rights?

Get medical attention right away. Take photos of the accident scene and gather witness information if you or someone else can. Report the accident as appropriate, like the police for a car accident or your employer if the injury happens at work. Keep records and bills related to the accident.

When you choose Smith & Jones Law, our lawyers will start immediately to protect your rights.

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864-383-0377

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