Spinal Cord Injury Claims — Paraplegia and Tetraplegia Compensation
Last reviewed: June 2026 · EA Personal Injury Solicitors
Spinal cord injuries causing paralysis are among the most life-changing and highest-value personal injury claims. Whether you have suffered paraplegia or tetraplegia following a road accident, workplace accident, or other negligent incident, you may be entitled to substantial compensation — covering lifetime care, specialist equipment, home adaptations, vehicle modifications, lost earnings, and more. No win, no fee is available for eligible claims.
TL;DR — Quick Summary
Key Points
- Spinal cord injuries can cause paraplegia (legs) or tetraplegia (arms and legs).
- General damages alone can reach £280,000–£400,000+; total awards are often far higher.
- Future care, equipment, home adaptations, and lost earnings can push totals into millions.
- Interim payments can fund rehabilitation and care before the claim settles.
- Early specialist SCI rehabilitation significantly affects long-term outcomes.
- No win, no fee is available for eligible spinal cord injury claims.
Understanding Spinal Cord Injuries
The spinal cord is the main pathway for signals between the brain and the rest of the body. Damage to it — from trauma, compression, or medical negligence — can interrupt those signals, causing permanent loss of movement and sensation below the injury level.
The level of injury determines the extent of impairment:
- Cervical (neck) injuries (C1–C8): Affect arms, hands, trunk, legs, and pelvic function. Higher cervical injuries may affect breathing. Those with high cervical SCI may require ventilatory support. This is tetraplegia (also called quadriplegia).
- Thoracic injuries (T1–T12): Affect trunk and legs. Arm function is typically preserved. This is paraplegia.
- Lumbar/sacral injuries (L1–S5): Affect legs and pelvic function. Many people with lower-level SCI can achieve some mobility with aids.
Complete injuries result in no movement or sensation below the injury level. Incomplete injuries preserve some function and have variable outcomes with rehabilitation.
Causes of Negligently Caused SCI
- Road traffic accidents — high-speed collisions are the most common cause
- Falls from height in construction, warehousing, and maintenance work
- Falling objects striking the head or back at work
- Diving into shallow water in pools or natural water where the premises owner failed to warn of danger
- Medical negligence — delayed diagnosis of cauda equina syndrome, or negligent spinal surgery
What Compensation Is Available?
Spinal cord injury compensation has two main components:
- General damages: For pain, suffering, and loss of amenity. JCG 17th edition ranges: paraplegia approximately £219,070–£284,260; tetraplegia approximately £324,600–£403,990. These are for general damages only.
- Special damages (often much larger):
- Lifetime professional care costs — often 24-hour care
- Case management throughout life
- Home purchase and adaptation, or major adaptations to existing home (accessible bathrooms, ramps, hoisting equipment, lifts)
- Powered wheelchairs, hand-controlled or adapted vehicles
- Loss of earnings over working lifetime
- Medical treatment, physiotherapy, and ongoing rehabilitation
- Cost of aids, equipment, and consumables
In the most severe tetraplegia cases with full lifetime care needs, total compensation (often structured partly as periodical payments) can reach £3–5 million or more.
Early Rehabilitation Is Critical
The first weeks and months following SCI are crucial for rehabilitation outcomes. We work hard to secure early interim payments and — where appropriate — to arrange early rehabilitation at specialist spinal injuries centres. The Rehabilitation Code framework allows us to work with the defendant insurer to fund rehabilitation without compromising the claim.