We get asked this question in almost every initial consultation. The answer depends on a handful of specific factors, and understanding them will help you negotiate from a position of knowledge rather than guesswork.
What California Law Allows You to Recover
Under California Civil Code Section 1431.2 and established case law, a personal injury plaintiff can recover both economic and non-economic damages. Economic damages are the measurable financial losses: medical bills, lost wages, property damage, and future care costs. Non-economic damages cover pain, suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life. Unlike some states, California does not cap non-economic damages in standard personal injury cases. (Medical malpractice is an exception under MICRA, Civil Code § 3333.2, where the cap recently increased to $470,000 for non-fatal cases as of January 1, 2026.)
The Factors That Actually Determine Value
Medical treatment costs form the baseline. This includes ER visits, surgery, imaging, PT, prescriptions, and any projected future treatment. Insurers look at total treatment costs as a starting point. But raw cost alone doesn't drive value. A $30,000 surgery with excellent recovery is worth less than a $30,000 surgery that leads to chronic pain and work restrictions.
Lost income is straightforward for W-2 employees. For self-employed individuals or business owners, we calculate lost revenue using tax returns and financial records. If your injuries permanently reduce your earning capacity, an economist calculates the present value of that diminished future income under Evidence Code § 801.
Injury severity is the single biggest variable. Soft-tissue injuries that resolve in three months sit in a different universe from spinal cord damage or traumatic brain injury. Fractures, nerve damage, chronic pain, and any injury requiring surgery drive value up substantially. Permanent impairment, disfigurement, or disability can push a case into seven figures.
Realistic Settlement Ranges
These are general ranges we see in practice. Your case may fall above or below depending on facts:
Soft tissue, full recovery within months: $10,000 to $50,000
Herniated disc, fractures, moderate treatment: $50,000 to $300,000
Surgery, extended recovery, chronic issues: $250,000 to $1,000,000+
Catastrophic (TBI, spinal cord, amputation, death): $1,000,000 to $10,000,000+
Comparative Fault Under CCP § 1431.2
California follows pure comparative negligence (Li v. Yellow Cab Co., 13 Cal.3d 804 (1975)). Even if you were 40% at fault, you recover 60% of your damages. There is no threshold that eliminates your claim entirely. Insurance adjusters routinely inflate your fault percentage to reduce payouts. We push back on those allocations aggressively because every percentage point matters.
Why the First Offer Is Almost Always Too Low
Insurance adjusters make initial offers before your treatment is complete, before your prognosis is clear, and before you have legal counsel. They know most people need money and will accept something rather than nothing. The difference between what an unrepresented claimant settles for and what a prepared attorney recovers is often significant. We don't accept an offer unless it reflects the actual value of your claim, and we have the trial preparation to back that up.
Free Case Evaluation: Call Lightview at (818) 646-8156. We will assess your specific injuries and give you a realistic range based on similar cases we have handled.