It’s the question almost every injured client asks within the first five minutes of a consultation: “How long is this going to take?” It’s a fair question, and the honest answer is usually some version of “longer than you want, but probably not as long as you fear.” More importantly, rushing toward a quick settlement is often the single biggest mistake an injured person can make, and insurance companies are counting on you not knowing that.
Understanding the actual phases of a Virginia injury case can turn anxiety into patience, and patience is frequently what protects your compensation.
If you’re wondering where your case stands or how long you might be looking at, The Decker Law Firm can walk you through the realistic timeline for your specific situation. Call us today at 757-622-3317 to schedule your free consultation.
Why Cases Take Time: The Honest Answer
Before walking through the phases, it helps to understand the core reason injury cases can’t simply be resolved quickly: you generally need to reach maximum medical improvement (MMI) — the point where your treating providers believe your condition has stabilized — before a case can be fully and fairly valued. Settling before MMI means guessing at your future medical needs, and that guess is almost always wrong in the insurance company’s favor.
Insurance adjusters know this. Some intentionally slow-walk communication or delay claims processing in the hope that a financially stressed claimant will accept a lowball offer just to make the problem go away. Recognizing this dynamic from the outset can make the waiting feel less like a failure of the system and more like a strategy you’re actively choosing not to fall for.
Phase 1: Treatment (Typically 3–18 Months)
This phase generally consumes the bulk of a case’s timeline, and for good reason. You need to actually heal, or reach a stable medical baseline, before anyone can accurately calculate what your injury costs you, medically, financially, and otherwise.
A soft tissue injury might resolve in a few months. A fracture or herniated disc may require many months of treatment, possibly including injections, physical therapy, or surgery, before reaching MMI. The treatment phase isn’t a delay tactic on the part of your attorney. It’s the foundation your entire claim is built on.
Phase 2: The Demand Package (Typically 1–2 Months)
Once you’ve reached MMI, your attorney generally compiles a comprehensive demand package by gathering complete medical records and billing, documenting lost wages, calculating both economic damages (medical bills, lost income) and non-economic damages (pain and suffering), and constructing the liability argument explaining why the other party is responsible.
This document becomes the opening position sent to the insurance company and typically sets the framework for everything that follows.
Phase 3: Negotiation (Typically 1–3 Months)
Insurance adjusters frequently respond to a demand with an initial offer well below what the claim may reasonably be worth. This is often standard practice, not necessarily a reflection of your case’s merits. What follows is typically a back-and-forth of counteroffers, supporting documentation, and negotiation that’s sometimes resolved through informal discussion, sometimes through mediation if both sides want a neutral third party to help bridge the gap.
Many cases resolve at this stage. Others don’t, and that’s where litigation becomes necessary.
Phase 4: Litigation, If Necessary (Typically 12–24 Months)
When negotiation doesn’t produce a fair resolution, filing a lawsuit may be the next step. This phase generally includes discovery (formal exchange of evidence and information), depositions of involved parties and witnesses, retention of expert witnesses where appropriate, and trial preparation.
It’s worth emphasizing: the overwhelming majority of filed personal injury cases still settle before reaching trial and often once the other side recognizes you’re prepared to follow through. Filing suit is frequently what finally moves a stalled negotiation, even if the case never sees a courtroom.
Realistic Timeline Ranges by Case Type
These are general ranges based on typical case patterns, not guarantees as every case depends on its own facts:
- Simple soft tissue injuries (sprains, strains, minor whiplash): roughly 3–9 months
- Moderate injuries (fractures, herniated discs, injuries requiring ongoing treatment): roughly 9–18 months
- Serious or permanent injuries (surgery, lasting impairment): roughly 18–36 months
- Complex cases involving disputed liability or multiple parties: roughly 24–48 months
What Slows a Case Down
Several factors can extend a timeline beyond these general ranges: gaps in medical treatment (which insurers may use to argue your injury wasn’t serious), disputed liability over who caused the accident, an insurance company that’s simply uncooperative or slow to respond, the necessity of litigation, and court scheduling backlogs that are entirely outside your attorney’s control.
What Speeds a Case Up
Conversely, several things can move a case forward faster: clear and undisputed liability, well-documented and consistent medical treatment, a defendant or insurer that’s motivated to resolve the matter, and, somewhat counterintuitively, more serious injuries can sometimes move efficiently once treatment concludes, particularly when policy limits give the insurer incentive to resolve rather than litigate.
Getting Money Sooner: Options Worth Discussing
Waiting for full resolution doesn’t necessarily mean going without any support along the way. Several options may be available depending on your situation:
Medical liens. Some medical providers will treat now and wait for payment from your eventual settlement, rather than requiring payment upfront.
Lawsuit funding (pre-settlement loans). These can provide cash during the case but typically carry significant interest and fees. They should generally be considered a last resort and discussed carefully with your attorney before signing anything.
Partial settlements. In limited circumstances, certain components of a claim may be resolved before the full case concludes, though this isn’t available in every situation.
If you’re facing financial pressure while your case is pending, talk to The Decker Law Firm about what options might be realistic for your circumstances. Call us today at 757-622-3317 to schedule your free consultation.
Setting Realistic Expectations
Yes, it takes time. But settling too early, before you know the full scope of your injury, before your treatment is complete, before your case is properly built, frequently means leaving money on the table that you can never go back and recover. The insurance company is not in a hurry to pay you fairly, and rushing only helps their position, not yours.
What you should expect from your legal team throughout this process is regular communication, transparency about where your case stands and why, and honesty about what’s realistically ahead. Most clients who’ve been through the full process say, looking back, that the wait was worth it once they saw the difference between what an early lowball offer would have paid and what their case was ultimately worth.
The Decker Law Firm represents personal injury victims throughout Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Suffolk, Hampton, and Newport News. We’ll give you a realistic, honest assessment of your case timeline from day one. Call us today at 757-622-3317 to schedule your free consultation. Helping people is what we do.
Decker Law • Norfolk, Virginia • 757-622-3317
Experienced Personal Injury attorneys throughout Hampton Roads, including Norfolk, Virginia Beach, Chesapeake, Portsmouth, Hampton, and Newport News.
This post reflects the state of the law as of its original publication date. Laws, regulations, and their interpretation change over time, and the information here may have been superseded, amended, or overturned since this article was published. Older posts are retained for reference and historical context and should not be relied upon as a current statement of the law.Nothing in this post is legal advice, nor does it create an attorney-client relationship. For guidance on your specific situation, please contact Decker Law directly.











