How Long Does a Personal Injury Claim Take?
Last reviewed: June 2026 · EA Personal Injury Solicitors
There is no single answer — timescales vary enormously depending on the complexity of the case, whether liability is disputed, and how long medical recovery takes. A simple road traffic accident claim can settle in 4–9 months. A serious injury claim involving ongoing treatment and future loss assessment can take 2–4 years or more.
TL;DR — Quick Summary
Key Points
- Simple RTA claims via the Official Injury Claim portal: typically 4–9 months
- Employer liability / public liability claims: typically 12–18 months
- Serious and catastrophic injury claims: 2–4 years or longer
- Industrial disease claims (e.g. hearing loss, asbestos): 12–36 months depending on complexity
- Disputed liability significantly extends timescales
Why Timescales Vary So Much
Personal injury claims are not a single, uniform process. The time a claim takes depends on a combination of factors: whether the defendant admits liability, how quickly medical evidence can be obtained, whether your condition has reached maximum medical improvement, and whether either party needs to go to court to resolve a dispute.
Typical Timescales by Claim Type
Low-Value Road Traffic Accident Claims (RTA Portal)
Road traffic accident claims with a value below £5,000 in injury damages are handled through the Official Injury Claim (OIC) portal and its pre-action protocols. These are the most streamlined personal injury claims. If liability is admitted quickly and medical evidence is obtained without delay, settlement is typically achieved in 4–9 months.
Employer Liability and Public Liability Claims
Workplace accident and public liability claims typically take 12–18 months for a straightforward case. These claims involve a pre-action protocol requiring the defendant to investigate and respond within set timeframes. If liability is admitted, the focus shifts to valuing the claim, obtaining medical evidence, and calculating all losses.
Industrial Disease Claims
Industrial disease claims — including noise-induced hearing loss, asbestos disease, and HAVS — can take 12–36 months depending on complexity. Tracing historical employers and their insurers can add time, as can obtaining specialist medical expert evidence.
Serious and Catastrophic Injury Claims
For brain injuries, spinal injuries, amputations and other catastrophic injuries, claims can last 2–4 years or longer. This is not a failing — it reflects the fact that the full extent of future care needs, loss of earnings, and rehabilitation cannot be properly assessed until the claimant's condition has stabilised. Settling too early can result in significant undercompensation.
Factors That Speed Up a Claim
- Early admission of liability by the defendant
- Clear and contemporaneous evidence (accident report, photographs, witness details)
- Medical treatment completed or condition fully stabilised
- Prompt responses from both parties and their insurers
- Claim value within a fixed-costs portal regime
Factors That Delay a Claim
- Disputed liability — the defendant denies fault or disputes the extent of their responsibility
- Ongoing medical treatment — the claim cannot be valued until the prognosis is known
- Multiple defendants or insurers involved
- Difficulty tracing historical employers or insurers (common in industrial disease)
- Complex causation arguments (e.g. pre-existing conditions, multiple incidents)
- Court backlogs if proceedings are issued
Can I Receive Money While I Wait?
In some cases, yes. Where a defendant has admitted liability and you have a clear, quantifiable financial need — for example, care costs, adaptations to your home, or rehabilitation — it is possible to apply for an interim payment. This is a payment on account of your eventual compensation, to be deducted from the final settlement.
Should I Accept an Early Settlement Offer?
Early offers from defendants or their insurers are often lower than the full value of a claim. Until medical treatment is complete and future needs are properly assessed, it can be difficult to know whether an offer reflects the true value of your losses. Your solicitor's job is to ensure that any settlement fully accounts for all heads of loss — including future losses — before advising you whether to accept.
For a free initial assessment of your claim, contact EA Personal Injury Solicitors at 01228 272 395 or via our online enquiry form.