Many people aren’t aware of just how much Personal Injury Protection insurance is able to help you with expenses other than medical bills and medical treatment.
In fact, Personal Injury Protection covers a panoply of things you may not know after a car accident.
This includes:
Yes, you heard us right—wage loss, or missed work due to injuries incurred from your car accident. There are some fine-print notes you should remember before immediately plunging into your pay stubs and records, however.
When we say PIP “covers” medical bills and wage loss, by that we mean a percentage. Don’t expect to have everything covered 100%. Medical expenses cover 80%, and wage loss covers 60%. While this isn’t ideal, having this at least partial reimbursement can assist with missed days from your car accident injuries.
The highlights: if you don’t receive medical treatment within 14 days of your accident, you aren’t eligible for any PIP coverage at all. Also, if you don’t receive an emergency medical condition, or EMC, you will only be able to receive $2,500.00 in reimbursement through PIP.
That said, it’s important to evaluate how many days of work you’re missing in conjunction with when you submit your wage loss for reimbursement.
Since your PIP coverage is depleted based on medical expenses and other factors, you need to be wary that it can become exhausted quicker than you may anticipate. Not only that, but most of the time, this happens on a first-come, first-serve basis.
Since hospital visits can frequently happen after a car accident, this can be a massive expense taken out of your PIP (sometimes even half of it for one hospital visit).
Taking the half-of-your-PIP scenario, then, this, paired with an MRI which can run upwards of $1,200.00, and medical appointments at 3 times a week, can become massively expensive, and the numbers can add up.
This is why it’s imperative you get help from an attorney, whose know-how in medical bills and PIP can assist you after a car accident.
If your PIP adjuster (the representative from your auto insurance) receives those claims ahead of your lost wages, he or she will process those first, and if there’s no PIP left, you won’t be reimbursed for your missed days of work.
While each insurance company handles PIP slightly differently (much like health providers all have nuanced policies), you should be prepared to provide the following in order to receive a payment:
The idea with Personal Injury Protection is to make you whole from what you lost as a result of the car accident, and double-paying you is not part of that in their (the insurance company's) eyes.
Don’t be stood up, or not get your calls returned. It’s important to know when to turn in your wage loss to be properly reimbursed, and an attorney can provide that window for you and notify you promptly.
So while PIP insurance does cover your wage loss, it only does as long as there’s PIP coverage available. If you want to learn more, please feel free to contact us, as we are very well-versed in lost wages within the personal injury field and can help you in the event of a car accident.