Personal Injury Claim vs Insurance Claim — What Is the Difference?
Last reviewed: June 2026 · EA Personal Injury Solicitors
A personal injury claim is a legal action against the party responsible for your injuries, seeking full compensation for pain, suffering, lost earnings, medical costs and future losses. An insurance claim is a claim under a specific policy — your own or the other party's — to recover specific losses defined by the policy terms. After an accident where someone else was at fault, a personal injury claim through a solicitor will almost always recover significantly more compensation than relying on insurance alone.
TL;DR — Quick Summary
Key Points
- Personal injury claims cover pain and suffering, lost earnings, medical costs and future losses — insurance claims typically do not.
- A personal injury claim is made against the negligent party; an insurance claim is made under a policy.
- Claiming a personal injury against a third party does not usually affect your own no-claims discount.
- Do not accept an insurance settlement for injuries without taking legal advice — early offers are often undervalued.
- You can often pursue both routes simultaneously — property damage via insurance, injury via a solicitor.
Why the Distinction Matters
After a road traffic accident, workplace accident or other incident, you may receive a call from the other party's insurer offering a quick settlement. This is an insurance process, not a legal process — and it is designed to resolve the claim quickly and cheaply, not to ensure you receive full compensation. A personal injury claim through a solicitor is a separate legal process governed by the Civil Procedure Rules that requires the other party to pay everything the law entitles you to.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Factor | Personal Injury Claim | Insurance Claim |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Compensate you fully for injury and all losses | Reimburse specific losses under policy terms |
| Who you claim against | The negligent party (through their insurer) | Your own insurer (first party) or other party's insurer |
| What you can claim | Pain, suffering, lost earnings, care costs, future losses | What your policy covers (may not include injury) |
| Excess deductible? | No — full compensation without excess deduction | Yes — you pay your excess first |
| Effect on your premium | Typically no effect (claiming against third party) | May affect no-claims discount |
| Time limit | 3 years from accident or date of knowledge | Usually prompt notification required by policy |
| Legal advice needed? | Yes — solicitor recommended for injury claims | Usually not — insurer handles the process |
| Who negotiates | Your solicitor on your behalf | Insurers negotiate between themselves |
| Future losses covered? | Yes — including future lost earnings and care | No — policies cover current, not future losses |
What a Personal Injury Claim Covers That Insurance Does Not
The purpose of personal injury compensation is to put you back in the position you would have been in had the accident not occurred — so far as money can achieve that. This includes:
- General damages — compensation for pain, suffering and loss of amenity, assessed by reference to the Judicial College Guidelines
- Future loss of earnings — if your ability to work has been permanently or significantly affected
- Future care and assistance — professional care or care provided by family members
- Rehabilitation and therapy costs — physiotherapy, psychological treatment, occupational therapy
- Aids and equipment — adaptations to your home or vehicle, specialist aids
- Care and case management — for serious injuries requiring long-term management
Standard insurance policies do not cover pain and suffering and typically do not cover future losses. They are designed to reinstate a financial position, not to compensate for harm.
After a Road Traffic Accident — The Specific Risk
Third-party insurers are required by law to compensate you if their insured was at fault. However, they will often make early contact and offer a settlement — sometimes before you have fully recovered or had an independent medical examination. Accepting a settlement at this stage is almost certainly premature.
Soft tissue injuries (whiplash, neck and back injuries) may take 6–18 months to resolve. If you accept a settlement before your injuries have stabilised, you cannot reopen the claim if your condition proves more serious than initially apparent. An independent medical examination, arranged by your solicitor, provides an objective assessment of your injuries, prognosis and any long-term consequences.
When an Insurance Claim Is the Right Route
An insurance claim is the right route for property damage — vehicle repairs, replacement goods, emergency accommodation — because these are specific quantifiable losses your policy is designed to cover. If no one else was at fault (a genuinely unavoidable accident), you may have no personal injury claim, and your own insurance is your only avenue for financial recovery.
If another party was at fault and you have suffered any personal injury, consult a solicitor before agreeing any settlement.