Christy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.
Christy Bieber, J.D. ContributorChristy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.
Written By Christy Bieber, J.D. ContributorChristy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.
Christy Bieber, J.D. ContributorChristy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has.
ContributorAdam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.
Adam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.
Adam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.
Adam has resided at the intersection of legal and journalism for two decades. An award-winning journalist and legal strategist, he’s covered high-profile trials in Florida. After law school, Adam and spent two years clerking for a U.S. District Co.
Updated: Mar 20, 2024, 4:44am
Editorial Note: We earn a commission from partner links on Forbes Advisor. Commissions do not affect our editors' opinions or evaluations.
Getty
If you are harmed by someone’s negligence or an intentional wrongful act, you can file a civil lawsuit to recover compensation for your losses. You may receive payment for monetary damages either as a result of prevailing in your lawsuit or from an out-of-court settlement.
When you receive compensation, you may be wondering, are personal injury settlements taxable? After all, typically you receive a large sum of money from an injury settlement–and usually the government takes a cut when you get paid.
This guide explains the rules for how taxes are handled when you get personal injury compensation.
If someone hurts you, you are entitled to make a claim to recover compensation so you can be “made whole” for your damages. You can pursue a civil case in court and the court will award you damages if you prove your claim. Or you can negotiate a settlement.
A personal injury settlement is paid as a result of those negotiations. Most often, you negotiate with an insurer such as an auto insurer, homeowner’s insurer or malpractice insurer representing the person or company that hurt you.
The insurer (or defendant who hurt you) will offer you a set amount of money in exchange for giving any further claims. This money is your personal injury settlement. Your settlement (or the damages awarded in a lawsuit) typically compensates you for:
A personal injury settlement can be worth tens of thousands of dollars or even millions of dollars. That’s why answering the question, are personal injury settlements taxable, is so important.
If you wonder whether lawsuit settlements are taxable, the good news is that personal injury settlements are not taxable on the federal level. According to IRC Section 104(a)(2), damages from personal injuries are tax-exempt, except for punitive damages. This means the IRS will not take any portion of your compensatory awards.
The federal government does not tax your settlement money since the funds received are intended to compensate you for losses that you endured. This is true both for actual economic damages (such as medical bills and lost wages) and for non-economic damages such as for pain and suffering and emotional distress.
However it is important to note that pain and suffering and emotional distress are not taxable only if there is a physical injury. If a dog lunged at you and caused you to develop PTSD but you were not physically harmed, damages for emotional distress would be taxable.
Economic damages are not taxed because you are simply recouping lost funds while non-economic damages are not taxed because they are meant to help make you whole for losses that you can’t get direct compensation for, such as pain you experience.
Since these are compensatory damages, the government assumes you’ve experienced a loss equal to the money you received and thus you don’t have taxable income from your settlement.
Some states also charge income taxes when you earn money, which are separate from federal taxes charged by the IRS and which are governed under different rules.
Although state tax rules differ from place to place, generally, states also do not tax personal injury settlements. To cite just one example, the Washington State Department of Revenue says that legal settlements for personal injury are not taxable in the state.
States also believe this money is intended to compensate you for losses. It is not income or a windfall, but rather money meant to pay you back for harm you endured.
If you have received lawsuit compensation and wonder, “Are personal injury settlements taxable?” the answer is that it depends. Certain damages may be taxable, including:
According to the IRS, punitive damages count as income, which means they are subject to taxation just as any other income would be. You may also owe taxes on the portion of your settlement related to medical expenses, but only if you previously deducted medical costs as a loss on your tax return. When you receive a settlement, consider contacting a tax professional who can identify your specific tax liabilities.
The answer to the question, are personal injury settlements taxable, is a bit more complicated than it might seem, though.
That’s because there’s certain situations where you might have to declare some of the income from your settlement on your federal and/or state tax return. This could occur if you took an itemized deduction for medical bills related to your injury in the years leading up to your settlement.
If you claimed a tax deduction for medical expenses and you then receive compensation for those expenses, you are required to declare income from the settlement that was meant to compensate you for the expenses you took a deduction for–if that deduction provided you with a tax benefit
For example, if you took a tax deduction for $10,000 of injury-related expenses and you receive a settlement that includes payment for those expenses, you would need to declare up to $10,000 of your settlement as taxable income.
Although most personal injury compensation is not taxable, there is an exception for punitive damages. These are not awarded in every personal injury case but may be awarded in circumstances where a defendant’s wrongdoing was egregious.
Punitive damages aren’t meant to compensate victims but are instead intended to punish defendants and deter future bad behavior. Since this money isn’t making you whole from prior losses, you may be taxed on the money you receive. The exception is if the claim was for wrongful death. In wrongful death cases, where state law provides only for punitive damages, the IRS considers these damages not taxable.
If you receive punitive damages, talk with your personal injury lawyer as well as with a tax attorney to determine whether your damages are considered taxable or not.
In situations where negligence or intentional wrongdoing result in a death, the estate of the deceased or surviving family members can make a wrongful death claim to recover compensation.
Damages for a wrongful death claim usually include medical bills incurred prior to death, lost wages the deceased would have earned had the injury not occurred, pain and suffering, emotional distress and loss of the deceased’s companionship. Since wrongful death is, in essence, a personal injury case in which the plaintiff died, the question “is a personal injury settlement taxable?” may arise.
In most cases, these economic and non-economic damages for wrongful death are also not taxable because they are meant to make you whole from a wrong.
An attorney can provide assistance in both personal injury and wrongful death cases to help you maximize your settlement and understand your tax obligations when you are compensated for harm.
Per IRC Section 61, the IRS considers all amounts from any source as income. This can include personal injury settlements, regardless of whether they are taxable or not. Generally, you should report all taxable income, including punitive damages, interest on your settlement and others. You may have to report non-taxable incom, too, depending on state and federal regulations and your specific circumstances.
Note that merely reporting your personal injury settlement on your annual tax return doesn’t necessarily mean you have to pay taxes on it. Since tax reporting requirements can change annually and vary from one state to another, contact a tax professional to understand your reporting obligations.
In general, economic and non-economic damages for physical injuries are not taxable. This means you do not have to pay taxes on compensation you receive after a car accident, slip and fall, medical malpractice incident or other situation where someone is held liable for physically harming you.
In many cases, a personal injury settlement is not taxed. If you do receive a taxable court settlement, you will likely receive a Form 1099-MISC. You report the information from this form on your tax returns in the Other Income box on your tax forms. Consult with a tax preparer if you need help.
When you’re looking for an answer to “are lawsuit settlements taxable?” remember there is a distinction between compensatory and punitive damages. Compensatory damages are intended to compensate you for the harm you experience due to someone’s intentionally wrongful or negligent behavior. If you receive compensatory damages as a result of a physical injury, the money is generally not taxable. However, punitive damages are intended to punish the defendant rather than to compensate you. This is taxable except in wrongful death cases.
Non-economic damages, such as pain and suffering, are generally not taxable because, like economic damages, they are intended to make you “whole” again after suffering a personal injury. However, there can be exceptions when you might have to pay taxes on pain and suffering. For example, if the pain and suffering damages are not related to a physical injury or reimbursement of medical expenses for pain and suffering, they may be taxable.
Was this article helpful? Share your feedback Send feedback to the editorial team Thank You for your feedback! Something went wrong. Please try again later. California Personal Injury LawyersBy Tamara Armstrong
By Sarah Edwards
By Sarah Edwards
By Tamara Armstrong
By Samantha Drake
By Sherin Mamachen
Information provided on Forbes Advisor is for educational purposes only. Your financial situation is unique and the products and services we review may not be right for your circumstances. We do not offer financial advice, advisory or brokerage services, nor do we recommend or advise individuals or to buy or sell particular stocks or securities. Performance information may have changed since the time of publication. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Forbes Advisor adheres to strict editorial integrity standards. To the best of our knowledge, all content is accurate as of the date posted, though offers contained herein may no longer be available. The opinions expressed are the author’s alone and have not been provided, approved, or otherwise endorsed by our partners.
Advertising paid for by participating attorneys in a joint advertising program, including attorneys licensed to practice law only in California. A complete list of joint advertising attorneys can be found here.
ContributorChristy Bieber has a JD from UCLA School of Law and began her career as a college instructor and textbook author. She has been writing full time for over a decade with a focus on making financial and legal topics understandable and fun. Her work has appeared on Forbes, CNN Underscored Money, Investopedia, Credit Karma, The Balance, USA Today, and Yahoo Finance, among others.
© 2024 Forbes Media LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Are you sure you want to rest your choices?The Forbes Advisor editorial team is independent and objective. To help support our reporting work, and to continue our ability to provide this content for free to our readers, we receive compensation from the companies that advertise on the Forbes Advisor site. This compensation comes from two main sources. First, we provide paid placements to advertisers to present their offers. The compensation we receive for those placements affects how and where advertisers’ offers appear on the site. This site does not include all companies or products available within the market. Second, we also include links to advertisers’ offers in some of our articles; these “affiliate links” may generate income for our site when you click on them. The compensation we receive from advertisers does not influence the recommendations or advice our editorial team provides in our articles or otherwise impact any of the editorial content on Forbes Advisor. While we work hard to provide accurate and up to date information that we think you will find relevant, Forbes Advisor does not and cannot guarantee that any information provided is complete and makes no representations or warranties in connection thereto, nor to the accuracy or applicability thereof. Here is a list of our partners who offer products that we have affiliate links for.