On a $50,000 settlement in Texas, most people take home about $18,500 to $31,000. What comes out of the gross is the attorney fee, case costs, and any medical bills or liens; which piece is largest depends on your treatment and how the case resolves. Settlement money for a physical injury is not taxed in Texas. Three things move the final number the most: how fault is divided, how far a hospital lien can be pushed down, and whether the case settles before or after a lawsuit is filed.
The math on $50,000
Two crashes can settle for the same $50,000 and pay out differently, mostly because of the fee and the liens. Here is the model:
| What comes out | Texas rule | Settles before suit | After a suit is filed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Attorney contingency fee | Rule 1.04 (written, reasonable) | ~33% = $16,665 | ~40% = $20,000 |
| Case costs | Repaid from your share | $500 to $2,000 | $3,000 to $8,000 |
| Hospital lien, if any | Property Code Ch. 55, 50% cap | Often negotiable | Often negotiable |
| Health plan subrogation | Your policy terms | Often negotiable | Often negotiable |
| Federal tax on injury money | IRC §104(a)(2) | $0 | $0 |
| Estimated take-home | ~$24,000 to $31,000 | ~$18,500 to $25,000 |
Three Texas rules that move your check
1. Comparative fault, the 51% rule
Your recovery drops by your share of the blame. At 20% at fault, a $50,000 settlement becomes $40,000 before deductions. Found more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing, which is why adjusters push to raise your share early (Texas Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §33.001).
2. The hospital lien cap
If a hospital treated you within 72 hours of the accident, it can lien your settlement under Property Code Chapter 55. It cannot take more than the lesser of its first 100 days of charges or 50% of your total recovery, and only usual and reasonable charges count (§55.004). These are often negotiated down.
3. Taxes, mostly in your favor
Under IRC §104(a)(2), money for a physical injury is not taxed, and Texas has no state income tax. The exceptions: punitive damages, interest on a late payment, and damages for emotional distress that is not tied to a physical injury can be taxable.
Why the hospital gets paid before you do
This is the part that blindsides people at the end of a case. The at-fault insurance company pays the full $50,000, but it does not hand it to you, and it does not pay the hospital. It pays your attorney’s trust account. Before any of that money reaches you, two separate claims can attach to it.
1. The Texas hospital lien (Property Code Chapter 55)
If a hospital treated you within 72 hours of the accident, Texas law gives it an automatic right to file a lien against your settlement, even though the insurance company had nothing to do with your care. The hospital files the lien with the county clerk and notifies your attorney, who must account for a valid lien before releasing your share. The insurer is not paying that hospital bill. You are, out of your settlement, because the hospital treated you on credit when you came in hurt.
2. Health insurance subrogation
If your own health plan paid your medical bills after the crash, your policy almost certainly has a subrogation clause. That clause lets the health plan be repaid from your settlement for what it spent. It is separate from the at-fault insurer entirely, and it runs on your insurance contract, not on the crash.
How a lien on $50,000 gets pushed down
A hospital does not keep whatever it billed. On a $50,000 settlement, three levers do the work:
The 50% cap. Under Property Code §55.004, a hospital lien cannot exceed the lesser of its first 100 days of charges or half your total recovery. On $50,000, that ceiling is $25,000, no matter what was billed.
Reasonable charges only. The lien covers only usual, customary, and reasonable charges. Inflated chargemaster rates can be challenged against what the hospital actually accepts from insurers and self pay patients.
The made whole doctrine. Texas applies a made whole default: a health plan’s subrogation can be limited until you are fully compensated. Clear policy language can override it (Fortis Benefits v. Cantu), and Insurance Code Chapter 140 caps many health plan recoveries by formula; ERISA plans can follow their own rules.
Why the same $50,000 isn’t equal across Texas
An offer is only good or bad next to your injury and your county. Juries, venues, and adjusters differ across Texas, and that backdrop shapes what an insurer will pay to stay out of a courtroom.
| Metro / county | What tends to shape value |
|---|---|
| Houston (Harris County) | Large urban jury pool; a credible trial threat carries weight; adjusters often move early |
| Dallas (Dallas County) | Heavily litigated; some suburban venues lean more defense friendly |
| Austin (Travis County) | Strong medical documentation culture; generally reasonable negotiation |
| San Antonio (Bexar County) | Negotiation first market; medical specials carry heavy weight |
| El Paso & border venues | Different carrier mix; lower policy limits are common |
The takeaway: a $50,000 offer can be fair in one county and low in another for the same injury, whether it comes from a car accident, an 18 wheeler crash, or a wrongful death claim. A lawyer who knows your venue knows whether to take it or push.
How to read your disbursement sheet
When your case settles, you sign a settlement disbursement sheet, sometimes called a closing statement. It shows exactly how the gross settlement becomes your check. Here is a sample $50,000 case that settled before suit:
| Gross settlement | $50,000 |
| Attorney fee (33.33%) | −$16,665 |
| Case costs | −$1,200 |
| Hospital lien (after negotiation) | −$6,500 |
| Health plan subrogation (after negotiation) | −$2,000 |
| Net to you | $23,635 |
Read the lien lines closely. That is where a good negotiation shows up, and the place to ask questions before you sign anything.
Want your real number, not a range?
Tell us about your offer. We will walk the fault, the liens, and the math with you, at no cost and no obligation. Se habla español.
Quick answers
How much do I take home from a $50,000 settlement in Texas?
Most people net about $18,500 to $31,000. The deductions are the attorney contingency fee (about one third before a lawsuit, around 40% after one is filed, under Rule 1.04), case costs, and any medical bills or liens; which one is largest depends on your treatment. Money for the physical injury itself is not taxed (IRC §104(a)(2)).
How much does a Texas injury lawyer take from a $50,000 settlement?
Texas contingency fees are commonly about 33% if the case settles before suit and around 40% once a lawsuit is filed, so roughly $16,665 to $20,000 on a $50,000 settlement. Rule 1.04 requires the fee to be in writing and reasonable, and the percentage can be discussed before you sign.
Are personal injury settlements taxable in Texas?
Usually not. Under IRC §104(a)(2), money for a physical injury or sickness is excluded from income, and Texas has no state income tax. Punitive damages, interest on a delayed payment, and damages for emotional distress not tied to a physical injury can be taxable.
What is a hospital lien, and how much can it take in Texas?
If a hospital treated you within 72 hours of the accident, it can place a lien on your settlement under Property Code Chapter 55. The lien is capped at the lesser of its first 100 days of charges or 50% of your total recovery (§55.004), and only usual and reasonable charges count. Liens are often negotiable.
What happens to my settlement if I was partly at fault?
Texas uses a 51% bar (§33.001). Your recovery is reduced by your share of fault, so at 20% fault a $50,000 settlement drops to $40,000 before other deductions. Found more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing, which is why adjusters try to raise your share.
Should I accept a $50,000 offer in Texas?
Only after you know what is driving it. A first offer often comes before liens are negotiated and the full injury is documented. Have someone check the fault split, the liens, and your future care needs first. A free case review costs nothing and carries no obligation.
How long does it take to get a $50,000 settlement check in Texas?
After you sign the release, the insurer usually issues the settlement check within a few weeks. Your attorney then pays case costs and resolves any liens before releasing your share, so it commonly runs about 4 to 8 weeks from signing to your net check, and longer when the liens are complex.
Can I negotiate my medical bills before the settlement is final?
Yes. Hospital liens and provider bills are routinely negotiated down, especially when a Chapter 55 lien tops the 50% cap (§55.004) or includes charges above usual and reasonable rates. Your attorney handles this before disbursement, and the savings go to you, not the lawyer.
What is the difference between economic and non-economic damages in Texas?
Economic damages are measurable losses: medical bills, lost wages, and future care. Non-economic damages cover pain, suffering, and mental anguish. Most Texas injury cases place no cap on non-economic damages; the main exception is medical malpractice, which caps them by statute.
What deductions come out of a personal injury settlement in Texas?
Four main ones: the attorney contingency fee (Rule 1.04), case costs, medical liens and health plan subrogation, and any unpaid medical bills. Federal tax usually does not apply to money for a physical injury under IRC §104(a)(2), and Texas has no state income tax.