Skip to main content
personal injury mediation

Personal Injury Mediation: How It Works and When to Use It in 2025

Personal injury mediation resolves 80% of cases before trial. Learn how the mediation process works, what to expect, and how to prepare for a winning outcome.

## What Is Personal Injury Mediation?

Mediation is a voluntary, confidential settlement process where both parties in a personal injury lawsuit meet with a neutral third-party mediator — typically a retired judge or experienced attorney — to negotiate a resolution. Unlike a trial, mediation is private and informal. Nothing said during mediation can be used in court if negotiations fail. Most courts now require parties to attempt mediation before allowing a case to proceed to trial, and for good reason: mediation resolves roughly 80% of personal injury disputes.

Mediation settlements are reached in a single day in most cases, saving both parties months of additional litigation costs and the uncertainty of a jury verdict.

How a Personal Injury Mediation Session Unfolds

Understanding the structure of mediation removes the anxiety from the process and lets you focus on achieving the best outcome.

  • **Opening statements:** Each side presents a brief summary of their position — your attorney outlines the strength of your evidence and your damages; the defense presents their narrative
  • **Joint session:** The mediator facilitates a discussion and asks questions to identify areas of potential agreement
  • **Caucuses (private sessions):** The mediator meets separately with each side, sharing information and testing settlement positions confidentially
  • **Settlement discussions:** The mediator shuttles proposals between rooms, helping both sides move toward a number that works
  • **Settlement agreement:** If a number is agreed upon, a written settlement agreement is signed before anyone leaves the room

Preparation is everything in mediation. Your attorney should bring a comprehensive mediation brief — including medical records, expert reports, witness statements, and a calculated damages summary — to demonstrate the full value of your case and justify your demand.

For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.