May 10, 2026
You’ve been injured in an accident. You’re frustrated, in pain, and facing medical bills. But does your situation justify hiring an attorney and pursuing a legal claim? Not every accident, regardless of how unfair it feels, translates into a viable personal injury case.
Our friends at Blaszkow Legal, PLLC evaluate potential cases daily, and honest assessment sometimes means telling people their situations don’t justify legal action. A personal injury lawyer can identify which cases have genuine merit and realistic recovery potential versus those that would cost more to pursue than they could possibly recover.
Clear Liability Must Exist
Someone’s negligence must have caused your injuries. Accidents happen. Random misfortune occurs. But legal liability requires proving someone breached a duty of care they owed you, and that breach directly caused your damages.
Slip and fall cases illustrate this distinction. You fell in a store and broke your wrist. That’s unfortunate, but it’s only a viable claim if the store created the hazard or knew about it and failed to warn customers or fix it. If you simply tripped over your own feet on a perfectly maintained floor, there’s no liability regardless of injury severity.
Evaluate whether you can actually prove someone else was at fault. “I was injured” isn’t the same as “someone else’s negligence injured me.” The second statement is what legal claims require.
Damages Must Be Substantial Enough
Pursuing injury claims involves costs. Attorney fees take a percentage of recovery. Case expenses add up. Time investment is significant. The damages you suffered must justify these costs and efforts.
According to the American Bar Association, minor injury cases with limited damages often cost more to pursue than victims ultimately recover, making them economically unviable despite clear liability.
Consider total damages honestly:
- All medical expenses past and future
- Lost wages and reduced earning capacity
- Pain and suffering appropriate to injury severity
- Property damage and other economic losses
- Permanence and long-term impacts
Cases with a few thousand dollars in medical bills and no permanent injury might not justify legal action. Cases with substantial medical treatment, ongoing impacts, and clear permanent damage almost always do.
Available Insurance Coverage Matters
You might have a strong case with severe injuries and clear liability, but if the responsible party has no insurance and no personal assets, recovery becomes nearly impossible.
We investigate insurance coverage and defendant assets before committing substantial resources to cases. Someone with minimum liability coverage and no other assets creates a practical ceiling on potential recovery regardless of actual damages.
This doesn’t mean cases without adequate insurance are never worth pursuing, but it affects strategic decisions about how much time and expense to invest.
Evidence Must Support Your Claims
Strong evidence makes cases worth pursuing. Clear documentation, credible witnesses, accident reports supporting your version of events, and medical records directly linking injuries to the incident create viable cases.
Weak evidence makes even serious injury cases risky. If liability is genuinely disputed with evidence supporting both sides equally, or if medical causation is questionable, the case might not justify litigation costs and risks.
Evaluate what evidence actually exists versus what you wish existed. Cases built on assumptions rather than documentation rarely succeed.
The Cost-Benefit Analysis
Every case requires weighing potential recovery against costs of pursuing it. Attorney contingency fees typically take 33% to 40% of recovery. Case expenses can reach thousands of dollars for depositions, medical records, and professional testimony.
A case likely worth $20,000 might net you $10,000 after fees and costs. Is that worth months or years of legal proceedings? Maybe. Maybe not. The answer depends on your specific circumstances and alternative options.
Cases likely worth $100,000 or more almost always justify pursuit because even after fees and costs, substantial recovery remains. Cases in the $10,000 to $30,000 range require individual evaluation.
Your Credibility and Conduct
Your own credibility affects case viability. Significant criminal history, documented dishonesty, or concerning social media presence can make otherwise strong cases difficult to win because juries won’t believe you.
Be honest with yourself about credibility issues you bring to a case. Minor problems can be managed. Major credibility deficits might make cases not worth pursuing regardless of injury severity.
Alternative Resolution Options
Sometimes pursuing smaller claims through small claims court or direct negotiation makes more sense than hiring attorneys for full litigation. Medical payment coverage might resolve bills without formal claims. Workers’ compensation provides alternatives for workplace injuries.
Evaluate whether formal legal action is necessary or if simpler resolution paths exist that accomplish your goals without litigation complexity.
Getting an Honest Assessment
Not every injury warrants legal action. Understanding whether your situation justifies pursuing a claim prevents wasting time and energy on cases unlikely to produce meaningful recovery.
If you’ve been injured and are uncertain whether your case has genuine merit, discussing your situation with an attorney who handles injury claims can provide honest assessment about whether pursuing legal action makes practical and economic sense for your specific circumstances.