When catastrophic injuries strike in Livingston County, the economic impact extends far beyond the initial hospital bills. Lost wages, diminished earning capacity, lifetime medical care, home modifications, and ongoing rehabilitation create financial burdens that can overwhelm families. At Logeman & Iafrate, P.C., our attorneys have spent more than 45 years fighting to recover every dollar of economic damages that Michigan law allows—helping injured people throughout Livingston County rebuild their financial security after devastating accidents.

What Are Economic Damages?

Economic damages compensate for objectively measurable financial losses caused by another person's negligence. Unlike non-economic damages for pain and suffering, economic damages address concrete monetary harm with documentation to support every dollar claimed.

In Michigan personal injury cases, economic damages typically include:

  • Medical expenses. Past and future costs for emergency care, surgery, hospitalization, doctor visits, prescription medications, physical therapy, rehabilitation, medical equipment, and all necessary treatment related to your injuries.
  • Lost income. Wages lost while recovering from injuries, including sick days, vacation time used, and unpaid leave. Documentation from employers establishes these losses with precision.
  • Lost earning capacity. When injuries prevent you from returning to your former work or limit your ability to earn at the same level, you can recover the difference between what you would have earned and what you can now earn for the rest of your working life.
  • Household services. Compensation for services you can no longer perform—lawn care, housekeeping, child care, home maintenance—that you must now pay others to handle.
  • Property damage. Vehicle repair or replacement costs in auto accidents, along with damage to personal property.
  • Future care costs. For catastrophic injuries requiring lifetime care, economic damages include projected costs for ongoing medical treatment, attendant care, adaptive equipment, and home modifications calculated over your life expectancy.

Economic Damages Under Michigan's No-Fault System

Livingston County auto accident victims face unique challenges due to Michigan's no-fault insurance system. Your own auto insurance provides Personal Injury Protection (PIP) benefits covering medical expenses, wage loss (up to 85% of gross income), and replacement services—regardless of who caused the crash.

However, the 2019-2020 no-fault reforms changed coverage dramatically. Depending on your policy choice, your PIP medical benefits may be capped at $50,000, $250,000, $500,000, or remain unlimited. When your economic losses exceed these caps, third-party claims against the at-fault driver become essential.

To pursue excess economic damages beyond PIP coverage, your injuries must meet Michigan's "serious impairment of body function" threshold. Our attorneys have extensive experience proving threshold injuries and maximizing third-party recoveries for Livingston County clients.

Proving Economic Damages in Livingston County

Insurance companies routinely challenge economic damage claims, arguing that treatment is unnecessary, losses are exaggerated, or injuries stem from pre-existing conditions. Successfully recovering full economic damages requires comprehensive documentation and expert testimony.

Our attorneys work with economic experts, life care planners, and vocational specialists to establish:

  • Medical necessity. Expert testimony from treating physicians demonstrating that all past and future medical expenses directly relate to the accident and represent appropriate, necessary care.
  • Lifetime care costs. Life care planners evaluate catastrophic injuries to project future medical expenses, attendant care needs, equipment costs, and home modifications over your life expectancy.
  • Lost earning capacity. Vocational experts analyze your work history, education, skills, physical limitations, and labor market conditions to calculate reduced earning capacity over your remaining work life.
  • Future wage loss. Economists project career earnings trajectories, accounting for promotions, raises, benefits, and inflation to demonstrate the full financial impact of your injuries.

No Damage Caps on Economic Losses

Unlike non-economic damages, Michigan law does not cap economic damages in most personal injury cases. You can recover the full amount of your documented financial losses—whether $100,000 or $10 million. For catastrophic injuries requiring lifetime care, economic damages frequently reach into the millions.

This makes thorough documentation absolutely critical. Our trial-ready approach ensures we build cases that withstand insurance company scrutiny and establish every dollar of economic harm you've suffered.

Our Experience with Livingston County Economic Damage Claims

We've secured substantial economic damage recoveries for clients throughout Livingston County. Our results include a $1.2 million verdict in Livingston County Circuit Court for a young girl who sustained a closed head injury, ensuring she had resources for future care needs. We've recovered lifetime medical coverage, substantial settlements for catastrophic injuries, and fought insurance companies that denied legitimate claims for medical expenses and wage loss benefits.

Many personal injury firms settle quickly to avoid the work of trial preparation. We take a different approach. Our verdicts and settlements reflect decades of fighting for injured clients throughout Michigan. When insurance companies see our name on a case, they know we're prepared to go the distance.

Free Consultation and Contingency-Fee Representation

We offer free consultations and operate on a contingency-fee basis for Livingston County clients. You pay nothing unless we win your case. This ensures that financial concerns never prevent injured people from pursuing the compensation they deserve.

If you've suffered catastrophic injuries in Livingston County, the clock is ticking. Michigan's statute of limitations generally gives you three years to file a personal injury lawsuit, but prompt action preserves evidence and strengthens your economic damage claim.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case is decided on its own facts.

Talk to an Experienced Livingston County Economic Damages Attorney Today

When catastrophic injuries devastate your financial future, you need experienced trial lawyers who know how to prove every dollar of economic loss. At Logeman & Iafrate, P.C., we've spent more than 45 years fighting for injured clients throughout Livingston County and Michigan. We take cases others won't, and we prepare every case for trial.

Call us at (734) 994-0200 or fill out our online contact form to schedule a free consultation. We'll review your case, explain your rights under Michigan law, and fight to recover the economic damages you need to move forward. We don't get paid unless we win.

Frequently Asked Questions About Economic Damages in Livingston County

What's the difference between economic and non-economic damages?

Economic damages compensate for objectively measurable financial losses like medical bills, lost wages, and future care costs—losses you can document with receipts, pay stubs, and expert projections. Non-economic damages compensate for subjective losses like pain, suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life. Michigan caps non-economic damages in some cases, but economic damages are not capped.

Can I recover economic damages if I was partially at fault for the accident?

Michigan follows a modified comparative negligence rule. You can recover economic damages even if you were partially at fault, as long as your fault doesn't exceed 50%. However, your recovery will be reduced by your percentage of fault. For example, if you're found 20% at fault, your economic damages award is reduced by 20%.

How do you calculate lost earning capacity after a catastrophic injury?

Calculating lost earning capacity requires vocational experts and economists who analyze your work history, education, skills, pre-injury earnings trajectory, and post-injury physical limitations. They project what you would have earned over your remaining work life versus what you can now earn given your restrictions, accounting for promotions, raises, benefits, and inflation. For catastrophic injuries causing permanent disability, these calculations often reach millions of dollars.

What if my medical expenses exceed my auto insurance PIP coverage?

If your economic losses exceed your PIP medical coverage caps and your injuries meet Michigan's "serious impairment of body function" threshold, you can pursue a third-party claim against the at-fault driver for excess medical expenses and other economic damages. You may also have underinsured motorist coverage that provides additional protection. Our attorneys evaluate all available coverage sources to pursue the full compensation you're owed.

How long do I have to file an economic damages claim in Livingston County?

Michigan's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is generally three years from the date of injury. However, different deadlines apply to no-fault PIP claims (one year to notify your insurer) and certain other claims. Missing these deadlines can forever bar your right to recover economic damages. Consulting an attorney promptly after your injury ensures you preserve all potential claims.

The information you obtain at this site is not, nor is it intended to be, legal advice. You should consult an attorney for advice regarding your individual situation. We invite you to contact us and welcome your calls, letters and electronic mail. Contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship. Please do not send any confidential information to us until such time as an attorney-client relationship has been established.