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New rules for whiplash and other minor road accident injury claims

View profile for Kenneth Amakye
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If you have been injured in a road traffic accident that was not your fault, then you may be entitled to compensation. To secure this, it is usual to employ the services of an experienced personal injury lawyer who will lodge a properly assessed and professionally valued claim on your behalf. Legal costs will usually be recoverable in the event that your claim succeeds.

As Kenneth Amakye, personal injury law expert with Hatten Wyatt in Gravesend, explains, ‘All of this is about to change because, with effect from 31 May 2021, new rules will apply to the majority of whiplash and other minor road traffic injury cases and which will limit the circumstances in which legal fees can be recovered.’

What the new rules say

The new rules provide that, for any road traffic accident occurring on or after 31 May 2021:

  • claims for whiplash injuries lasting two years or less, and which give rise to no or only minor psychological trauma, must now be settled according to a tariff system which fixes compensation at between £240 to £4,345, but with the flexibility for awards to be increased by up to a maximum of 20 per cent in exceptional cases;
  • claims for whiplash injuries can no longer be settled out of court without a medical report which provides independent verification that such injuries have been sustained; and
  • claims for any type of injury suffered in a road traffic accident which can be valued at less than £5,000, and where the total being sought including financial losses is less than £10,000, must now be dealt with via a newly created online system, called the Official Injury Claim (OIC) portal, which has been specifically designed to accept and process low value claims without lawyer input.

Access to the OIC portal and associated user guidance can be gained by clicking on this link: Official Injury Claim.

The aim of the new rules is to stamp out fraudulent and exaggerated whiplash claims, and to try to drive down the cost to insurers of dealing with minor injury cases.

However, we believe it is important for accident victims to not now feel as though they have no choice but to go it alone where the injuries that they have sustained seem to be only minor, because this will not necessarily always be the case. 

Potential problems

There is currently a lack of clarity around how people with no legal training are supposed to assess the value of their claim accurately, and therefore how they can determine whether or not it should be processed via the OIC portal.  This is important because if the true value of a claim exceeds the parameters under the new rules, then it will still be possible to employ a lawyer to deal with the matter on your behalf and to recover the costs associated with doing this.

There is also a lack of clarity in the context of whiplash cases, about how someone without legal knowledge is supposed to know whether any psychological symptoms they have should be classed as ‘minor’ or not, or in what circumstances a case might be considered so ‘exceptional’ as to qualify for a tariff award being increased by up to 20 per cent.

Exceptions to the rules

It is also important to note that not all whiplash and minor personal injury claims will be caught by the new rules, and accordingly legal advice should always continue to be sought in any case involving:

  • a claim made on behalf of a child;
  • a claim made on behalf of an adult who lacks mental capacity;
  • a claim made by a vulnerable road user, including a pedestrian, a cyclist, a motorcyclist, a pillion or sidecar passenger, a horse rider, or the user of a mobility scooter;
  • a claim made by or on behalf of an accident victim who is an undischarged bankrupt;
  • a claim where the accident victim or the person being sued has since died; or
  • a claim where, at the time of the accident, the vehicle of the person being sued was registered outside of the UK.

Conclusion

In order to ensure that your claim is assessed properly and valued appropriately, it is prudent to continue to take legal advice in any case where a claim for personal injury compensation and the recovery of associated financial losses is being contemplated.  This is particularly true where you continue to be plagued by your injuries six to nine months after the accident occurred or where you have sustained substantial financial losses or out of pocket expenses.

For injuries that are obviously minor in nature, it may be sensible for advice to be taken at the start of a case in order to gain an idea of the compensation that you can expect to recover, and then again later on if you encounter any difficulties in navigating the OIC portal.  This might be the case where:

  • you are self-employed and need help calculating the earnings that you have lost as a result of the injuries you have sustained;  
  • you have a medical report that you do not understand or which you believe underestimates the pain and suffering you have had to endure, or the impact that your injuries have had or are continuing to have on your quality of life;
  • your opponent has suggested that you may be exaggerating the extent of the injuries that you have suffered or the degree to which they have affected you; or
  • you need help assessing the reasonableness of a settlement offer. 

Legal advice may also be necessary where you have started your claim in the OIC portal, but it has since become apparent that it should not be there and so action needs to be taken to have your claim reallocated in order that it can be dealt with as a higher value claim and where the recovery of legal costs will then be allowed.

You should also continue to seek legal advice in any claim which falls outside of the new rules, or where you have suffered multiple injuries or have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder or another potentially serious and long-term psychological condition.

For further information, please contact Kenneth Amakye on 01474 351199 or via email at Kenneth.Amakye@hatten-wyatt.com.

This article is for general information only and does not constitute legal or professional advice. Please note that the law may have changed since this article was published.