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Medical Liens & Subrogation

Medical Liens in Florida

A lien is a legal claim against your personal injury settlement by a third party who paid for your medical treatment. In Florida, liens from hospitals, health insurers, Medicare, and Medicaid must be addressed before you receive your net settlement funds.

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

Modified comparative fault (51% bar)

Fault System

2 years

Filing Deadline

$15,000 – $75,000

Avg Settlement

Types of Medical Liens in Florida

Hospital Liens

Florida hospitals that treated you for accident injuries may file a hospital lien against your settlement to recover unpaid bills. The lien attaches to your recovery before you are paid.

Health Insurance Subrogation

If your health insurer paid your medical bills, they have a subrogation right to be reimbursed from your settlement. Many states allow negotiation to reduce these amounts.

Medicare & Medicaid

Federal law requires Medicare and Medicaid liens to be paid in full — with limited exceptions. Your attorney must resolve these before settlement funds are distributed.

Workers' Compensation

If workers' comp covered your treatment for a work-related injury in Florida, they have a lien on any third-party recovery you obtain.

Florida Injury Law Overview

Florida underwent major personal injury law reform in 2023. The state remains a mandatory no-fault PIP insurance state, requiring $10,000 in PIP coverage to access medical benefits without proving fault. However, the 2023 HB 837 reform shifted Florida from pure comparative fault to modified comparative fault with a 51% bar, preventing plaintiffs bearing majority fault from recovering. The same law reduced the statute of limitations from 4 years to 2 years. These changes significantly favored defendants and insurers. Plaintiffs must still meet a serious injury threshold to step outside the PIP system and file a tort lawsuit for pain and suffering damages. Florida sees high litigation volumes due to its large elderly population, heavy tourist traffic, and active construction industry. Medical malpractice cases require a pre-suit investigation period and expert affidavit. Wrongful death claims have a 2-year statute of limitations under Fla. Stat. § 95.11.

Legal Injury GuideFor informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.