Can’t Afford a Lawyer? How Contingency Fees Actually Work

You’re injured. Medical bills are piling up. You can’t work. Now you’re supposed to hire an attorney and pay legal fees?

You don’t pay upfront. Most personal injury attorneys work on contingency, which means you pay nothing unless you win. No retainer, no hourly billing, no out-of-pocket legal fees while your case is pending.

Understanding how contingency fees work removes the biggest barrier to getting legal representation when you need it most.

How Contingency Fees Work

Your attorney agrees to represent you without charging any upfront fees. Instead, they take a percentage of your settlement or verdict—typically 33-40% in California personal injury cases.

If you win nothing, you pay nothing. The attorney absorbs the risk. This aligns your interests with your lawyer’s. They only get paid if they recover compensation for you, so they’re motivated to maximize your settlement.

The percentage is set in your fee agreement before representation begins. It doesn’t change unless your case goes to trial, which sometimes increases the percentage to account for additional work.

What’s Included in the Fee

The contingency fee covers all attorney time: investigation, negotiation with insurance companies, legal research, drafting demand letters, filing lawsuits if necessary, court appearances, settlement discussions.

Your attorney handles all the legal work without sending you hourly invoices. You’re not watching the clock worry about every phone call or email adding to your bill.

Case Costs vs. Attorney Fees

Attorney fees and case costs are different. Contingency fees cover legal work, but cases also involve expenses: filing fees, court reporter fees for depositions, expert witness fees, medical record costs, investigation expenses.

Some attorneys advance these costs and only recover them if you win. Others require clients to pay costs as they arise. Your fee agreement should specify how costs are handled.

At Cohen.Law, we advance all case costs. You don’t pay anything out of pocket during your case. We recover costs from the settlement or verdict only if we win.

How the Math Works

You settle your case for $100,000. Your attorney’s contingency fee is 33%, which equals $33,000. Case costs totaled $5,000. You receive $62,000.

The attorney made the case worth more than you could have recovered alone. Insurance companies offered you $40,000 before you hired representation. After attorney involvement, they paid $100,000. Even after fees and costs, you netted $22,000 more than the initial offer.

This is typical. Represented claimants recover significantly more than unrepresented claimants, even after attorney fees.

When Fees Increase

Some fee agreements include higher percentages if your case goes to trial—often 40% instead of 33%. Trial requires substantially more attorney time, preparation, and risk.

Your attorney should discuss this with you before trial. You can always accept a settlement offer to avoid the higher fee if the math makes sense.

What If You Lose

If you don’t recover compensation, you owe nothing in attorney fees. This is the defining feature of contingency representation.

You may still be responsible for case costs if your agreement requires it, but many attorneys waive costs in losing cases. Read your fee agreement carefully to understand your obligation.

Contingency vs. Hourly Billing

Hourly billing means paying $300-$600 per hour for attorney time. A moderately complex personal injury case might require 50-100 hours of work. That’s $15,000-$60,000 in fees before recovering a dollar.

Most injured people can’t afford this, especially when medical bills and lost wages already create financial strain. Contingency fees make quality legal representation accessible regardless of your financial situation.

Why Attorneys Take Contingency Cases

Attorneys accept the risk because personal injury cases often recover substantial compensation. The percentage-based fee can be worth more than hourly billing for successful cases.

But attorneys screen cases carefully. They only take cases with good liability, significant damages, and collectible insurance or assets. If your case has problems, attorneys may decline representation even on contingency.

What to Look for in Fee Agreements

Your fee agreement should clearly state the percentage, how it changes if the case goes to trial, how costs are handled, what happens if you don’t recover compensation, whether the attorney advances costs.

Read it carefully before signing. Ask questions about anything you don’t understand. A good attorney explains fee arrangements clearly without legal jargon.

The Real Cost of Not Hiring an Attorney

Insurance companies know unrepresented claimants accept lower settlements. They offer $30,000 to someone handling their own claim knowing an attorney would get $80,000.

You “save” the attorney fee but lose far more in reduced settlement value. The attorney’s percentage is worth paying for the increased recovery they generate.

Free Consultations

Most personal injury attorneys offer free initial consultations. You discuss your case, get legal advice, understand your options—all without paying anything.

If the attorney takes your case, contingency fees apply. If they don’t, you’ve gotten free legal advice and can make informed decisions about next steps.

We Work on Contingency

Cohen Injury Law Group represents injury victims throughout California on contingency. You pay nothing upfront. We advance all case costs. You only pay if we recover compensation for you.

We take the financial risk so you can focus on recovery while we handle the legal fight. Our fee agreement is straightforward, no hidden charges or surprises.