What a Contingency Fee Means

You pay nothing upfront.
The attorney only gets paid if they win or settle your case.

Instead of billing hourly, the lawyer takes a percentage of the money recovered for you.


Typical Fee Percentage

Most personal injury attorneys charge:

  • 33⅓% (one-third) if the case settles before a lawsuit
  • 35%–40% if a lawsuit is filed or goes to trial

So if your settlement is $90,000:

  • 33% fee = about $30,000 to the attorney
  • You receive the remaining amount (minus case costs — explained below)

Case Costs (This Is Important)

Attorney fees and case expenses are different.

Expenses are the money spent to build your case:

  • Medical records
  • Police reports
  • Expert witnesses
  • Court filing fees
  • Depositions
  • Accident reconstruction

These usually range from $500 to $10,000+ depending on complexity.

Who pays those?

It depends on the firm’s contract:

Two common models

  1. Lawyer advances the costs and subtracts them from the settlement (most common)
  2. Client reimburses costs even if the case loses (less common — always ask!)

Example Settlement Breakdown

Settlement: $100,000

ItemAmount
Attorney Fee (33%)$33,000
Case Costs$4,000
Client Receives$63,000

What Happens If You Lose?

Usually:

  • You owe no attorney fee
  • You may owe case costs depending on the agreement

This is why reading the retainer agreement matters.


Why Lawyers Use This System

It allows injured people to hire a lawyer without needing money upfront.
The attorney is also motivated to maximize your settlement — they only get paid if you do.


Questions You Should Always Ask Before Hiring

  1. What percentage do you charge?
  2. Does the percentage increase if a lawsuit is filed?
  3. Who pays case expenses if we lose?
  4. Are expenses taken before or after your fee?