High-Value and Complex Personal Injury Claims
Last reviewed: June 2026 · EA Personal Injury Solicitors
High-value personal injury claims involve catastrophic or serious injuries with substantial long-term losses — typically where total compensation exceeds £250,000 and can reach several million pounds. These claims require specialist solicitors, multiple expert disciplines, and careful management to ensure future care, earnings, rehabilitation, and accommodation needs are fully valued and recovered. No win, no fee is available for eligible claims.
TL;DR — Quick Summary
Key Points
- High-value claims typically involve total compensation exceeding £250,000.
- Multiple specialist experts are needed to value future care, earnings, and accommodation.
- Periodical payments orders allow lifetime care costs to be paid as annual sums.
- Interim payments fund urgent care and rehabilitation before settlement.
- Court of Protection involvement may be required where the claimant lacks capacity.
- Specialist solicitors are essential — quantum evidence and strategy is complex.
What Makes a Claim High Value?
A personal injury claim becomes high value when the combination of general damages and future losses is substantial. While general damages for the most serious injuries can exceed £350,000 for a traumatic brain injury or tetraplegia, it is often the future losses — particularly lifetime care and loss of earnings — that push total compensation into the millions.
Typical features of high-value claims:
- Catastrophic or permanent injury — brain injury, spinal cord injury, amputation, multiple trauma
- Significant ongoing care needs — from family assistance through to round-the-clock professional care
- Long-term or permanent loss of earnings — particularly in younger claimants
- Major adaptations required to the home, or a need to purchase an accessible property
- Complex medical prognosis requiring evidence from multiple specialist consultants
The Role of Expert Evidence
High-value claims depend on thorough, well-evidenced expert reports. Key experts typically instructed include:
- Medical experts: Neurologists, neurosurgeons, orthopaedic surgeons, rehabilitation consultants — to assess the injury, treatment, and long-term prognosis.
- Care expert: A qualified nurse or occupational therapist who assesses current and future care needs and produces a lifetime care report with costings.
- Case manager: In the most serious cases, a case manager co-ordinates rehabilitation and care — their costs are also recoverable.
- Employment expert: Assesses past and future loss of earnings, including lost pension, where the injury affects the ability to work.
- Accommodation expert: Assesses whether the claimant requires specially adapted or purpose-built accessible accommodation and the capital and revenue costs.
- Financial expert or actuary: Models the financial value of future losses, particularly where periodical payments are being considered.
Periodical Payments Orders
In catastrophic injury cases involving significant lifetime care costs, it is often in the claimant's interest to receive part of the compensation as periodical payments — an annual sum linked to a relevant index (such as the Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings for care costs) — rather than as a single lump sum. Periodical payments provide certainty: the payments continue for life and are not affected by investment performance or the claimant living longer than actuarially predicted.
We advise clients carefully on the choice between lump sum and periodical payments structures, in conjunction with independent financial advice.
Court of Protection
Where a catastrophic injury causes the claimant to lack mental capacity, any settlement must be approved by the court. Following settlement, a Court of Protection deputy may be appointed to manage the compensation fund. We have experience in navigating both the litigation and the Court of Protection process in high-value cases.
Interim Payments
Early interim payments are vital in high-value cases. They fund urgent rehabilitation, care provision, accessible accommodation, and specialist equipment that cannot wait for the claim to be finally resolved — which may take years. We apply for interim payments as soon as liability has been established or admitted.