Levalera
Apply for Funding — Free Consultation
All Articles
Education

Workers' Compensation vs. Pre-Settlement Funding: Understanding the Difference

March 25, 20268 min read

Key Takeaways

  • Workers' compensation and pre-settlement funding are fundamentally different. Workers' comp is an insurance system your employer pays into; pre-settlement funding is a cash advance against a pending personal injury lawsuit.
  • You cannot get pre-settlement funding for a workers' comp claim alone. Because workers' comp is a no-fault administrative system with scheduled benefits, there is no lawsuit settlement to fund against.
  • Third-party claims change the equation. If someone other than your employer caused your workplace injury — a negligent driver, equipment manufacturer, or property owner — you may have a personal injury lawsuit that qualifies for funding.
  • You can receive workers' comp and pursue a third-party lawsuit simultaneously. These are separate legal tracks, and pre-settlement funding can help bridge the financial gap while the third-party case is pending.
  • Understanding the distinction matters. Knowing which legal avenue applies to your situation helps you make informed financial decisions during recovery.

How Workers' Compensation Works

Workers' compensation is a state-mandated insurance program that provides benefits to employees who are injured on the job. Nearly every employer in the United States is required to carry workers' comp insurance, and the system operates on a no-fault basis — meaning you receive benefits regardless of who caused the injury.

When you file a workers' comp claim, you may receive:

  • Medical treatment coverage — all reasonable and necessary medical care related to your work injury, including surgery, physical therapy, medication, and rehabilitation
  • Temporary disability payments — typically two-thirds of your average weekly wage while you're unable to work, subject to state caps
  • Permanent disability benefits — compensation for lasting impairments once you reach maximum medical improvement
  • Vocational rehabilitation — job retraining if you can no longer perform your previous role

The trade-off is significant: in exchange for these guaranteed benefits, you give up the right to sue your employer for negligence. Workers' comp is designed as an administrative remedy — disputes are resolved through state workers' comp boards, not civil courts. There is no jury trial, no pain-and-suffering award, and no punitive damages. Benefits follow a statutory formula rather than reflecting the full scope of your losses.

This is the core reason pre-settlement funding doesn't apply to workers' comp claims: there is no pending lawsuit producing a settlement to advance against.

How Pre-Settlement Funding Works — and Why It Requires a Lawsuit

Pre-settlement funding is a cash advance against the expected proceeds of a pending personal injury lawsuit. A funding company evaluates the merits of your case — liability, damages, insurance coverage — and provides upfront cash that is repaid from the eventual settlement or verdict.

The critical structural requirement is that there must be an active civil lawsuit with a quantifiable expected recovery. Pre-settlement funding companies are investing in the outcome of litigation. They need:

  • A defendant whose negligence caused your injuries
  • Insurance coverage or assets to pay a settlement
  • An attorney representing you in the case
  • A reasonable expectation of recovery based on the facts

Workers' comp claims don't meet these criteria. The benefits are predetermined by statute, paid by an insurance carrier (not a negligent defendant), and resolved through administrative proceedings rather than civil litigation. There is no "settlement" in the traditional sense — just benefit determinations and potential appeals within the workers' comp system.

This distinction is important because plaintiffs sometimes confuse the two paths or assume that because they were hurt at work, they cannot access pre-settlement funding. That's not always true — it depends on whether a third party was involved.

When a Workplace Injury Becomes a Third-Party Claim

Here is where it gets interesting for injured workers: while you cannot sue your employer in civil court (the workers' comp exclusive remedy bars that), you can sue a third party whose negligence contributed to your workplace injury. These third-party claims are standard personal injury lawsuits and absolutely qualify for pre-settlement funding.

Common third-party workplace injury scenarios include:

  • Motor vehicle accidents on the job. If a negligent driver hit you while you were driving for work — making deliveries, traveling between job sites, or commuting to a client meeting — you have a third-party auto accident claim against that driver. This is the most common source of third-party workplace injury claims.
  • Defective equipment or machinery. If a faulty machine, power tool, or piece of safety equipment caused your injury, the manufacturer or distributor may be liable under product liability laws. Your employer purchased the equipment, but the defect originated with a third party.
  • Dangerous premises owned by someone other than your employer. Construction workers, delivery drivers, and home health aides frequently work on property they don't own. If unsafe conditions on someone else's property caused your injury — an unmarked hazard, a collapsing structure, toxic exposure — the property owner may be liable.
  • Negligence by a subcontractor or other company's employee. On multi-employer worksites (common in construction and manufacturing), another company's worker or subcontractor may cause your injury through carelessness.
  • Toxic exposure caused by a chemical manufacturer. If you developed an occupational illness due to exposure to a hazardous substance, the company that manufactured or distributed that substance may be a liable third party.

In each of these scenarios, you would file a workers' comp claim against your employer's insurer and a personal injury lawsuit against the negligent third party. The personal injury lawsuit is the one that qualifies for pre-settlement funding.

Need funding while your case is pending?

Apply in under 5 minutes. No credit check, no obligation.

Apply Now →

Financial Gaps That Funding Fills

Even when you're receiving workers' comp benefits, the financial picture is often far from comfortable. Here's why third-party claim plaintiffs frequently need additional support:

Workers' comp only covers partial wages. Most states cap temporary disability payments at two-thirds of your average weekly wage, and many impose weekly maximums (often between $800 and $1,200). If you were earning $75,000 per year, a weekly cap of $1,000 means you're living on roughly $52,000 — a 30% pay cut when your expenses may actually be increasing.

Non-economic damages aren't covered. Workers' comp does not compensate for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, or the impact on your relationships. These are significant losses that your third-party lawsuit addresses, but that compensation is months or years away.

Out-of-pocket costs add up. Even with medical treatment covered, you face transportation costs to appointments, home modifications for disability, childcare during recovery, and increased household expenses. Workers' comp doesn't cover these ancillary costs.

Third-party cases take time. While your workers' comp benefits provide a baseline, your third-party lawsuit — where the real compensation for your full losses resides — may take one to three years to resolve. During that time, the gap between workers' comp benefits and your actual financial needs widens.

Pre-settlement funding bridges this gap by providing cash against the expected recovery from your third-party lawsuit. The funds can be used for any purpose — medical bills, mortgage payments, groceries, or anything else your family needs while waiting for a fair resolution.

How to Know If You Qualify for Funding

Determining whether your workplace injury case qualifies for pre-settlement funding comes down to one central question: is there a third-party personal injury lawsuit?

Here is a simple framework to evaluate your situation:

You likely qualify if:

  • You were injured at work AND a third party (not your employer or coworker) caused or contributed to the injury
  • You have retained a personal injury attorney who has filed or plans to file a civil lawsuit against the third party
  • There is insurance coverage or assets available to pay a settlement
  • Your injuries are documented and your case has merit

You likely do not qualify if:

  • Your only claim is a workers' compensation claim against your employer's insurer
  • No third party was involved in causing your injury
  • You do not have an attorney pursuing a civil lawsuit

If you're unsure whether a third party may be liable, discuss it with your attorney. Many workplace injury cases have third-party angles that aren't immediately obvious — a defective product, an unsafe premises condition, or a negligent subcontractor. An experienced personal injury attorney will identify these opportunities.

Once you've confirmed that a third-party lawsuit exists, applying for pre-settlement funding is straightforward. The process typically takes 24-48 hours from application to funding.

Workers' Comp Liens and Your Third-Party Settlement

One important detail to discuss with your attorney: if you receive workers' comp benefits and then recover a settlement from a third-party lawsuit, your workers' comp insurer may have a subrogation or lien right against the third-party settlement.

This means the workers' comp carrier can seek reimbursement for the benefits it paid you from the proceeds of your third-party settlement. The specifics vary by state, but in general:

  • The workers' comp insurer has a right to recover what it paid in benefits
  • Your attorney can often negotiate this lien down significantly
  • Some states reduce the lien proportionally based on your attorney's fees and costs
  • The lien amount is deducted from your settlement before you receive your share

This lien is separate from any pre-settlement funding repayment. When your case settles, the distribution typically follows this order: attorney fees and costs first, then the workers' comp lien, then the funding repayment, then your remaining share.

A skilled personal injury attorney will account for all of these deductions when evaluating settlement offers and will negotiate the workers' comp lien aggressively to maximize your net recovery. The funding company also considers these factors during underwriting to ensure the total obligations don't consume an unreasonable portion of the expected settlement.

If you have questions about how workers' comp liens interact with pre-settlement funding in your specific case, contact our team or discuss it with your attorney. Understanding the full financial picture upfront helps you make the best decisions for your recovery.

Need funding while your case is pending?

Apply in under 5 minutes. No credit check, no obligation.

Apply Now →

Take the Next Step

If you've been injured at work and believe a third party may be responsible, you may have both a workers' comp claim and a personal injury lawsuit — and the personal injury lawsuit may qualify for pre-settlement funding.

Here's what to do:

  • Talk to your attorney about whether a third-party claim exists. If you don't have a personal injury attorney yet, your workers' comp lawyer may be able to refer you to one.
  • Apply for funding if you have an active third-party lawsuit. Visit our application page to get started — it takes less than five minutes.
  • Learn more about how non-recourse funding works and what to expect from the process.

At Levalera, we understand the complexity of workplace injury cases with multiple legal tracks. Our team evaluates each case individually and works closely with your attorney to determine the right funding amount. There is no cost to apply, no obligation, and no risk — if your case doesn't succeed, you owe nothing.

Related Articles

Ready to Get Started?

Apply in under 5 minutes. No credit check, no obligation, and you only pay if you win your case.

Apply for Funding →