What is a Compromise and Release (C&R)?

There are two types of settlements in workers' compensation: a Compromise and Release (“C&R”) and Stipulations (“Stips”). If an injured worker goes through treatment but doesn't heal 100% and a doctor has assigned some amount of “Permanent Disability” to the injured worker, the injured worker will get money to compensate them for how much Permanent Disability (“PD”) the doctor assigned. The more PD that a doctor assigns, the higher the amount of compensation.

Settling Your case through Stipulation, Stipulated Award (Stips)

Stipulations: the injured worker gets some money and retains the right to future medical care for the injured part(s) of the body.

When an injured worker settles his or her claim by Stips they get paid for that amount of Permanent Disability, and nothing more. The injured worker can continue to have access to free health care to the injured part(s) of their body.

Settling a workers’ compensation claim via Stipulations (or “Stips”) is rather simple. The injured worker gets paid for the amount of Permanent Disability (“PD”) that a doctor opines that the injured worker has. That is all that the worker gets paid for. He or she continues to have access to medical treatment through the workers' compensation system, which means that the worker can continue to get treatment paid for by the insurance company. (Please note that all treatment is still subject to approval or denial by the insurance company, just like treatment is prior to settlement.) Stips are paid at a rate of $290 per week, or less if the injured worker had a low rate of pay prior to their injury until the worker receives all PD payments, minus attorney fees. That’s all.

Settling Your Case Through Compromise and Release (C & R)

Compromise and Release: the injured worker gets more money than Stipulations, but the injured worker will no longer get free treatment from the insurance company.

A C&R pays the injured worker for that same Permanent Disability, but also adds more money as an estimate of how much money the injured worker may need for future medical care for the injured part(s) of body. This type of agreement ENDS the injured worker's right to free medical care for their injury. This type of agreement also resolvesEVERYTHING in a workers' compensation claim. So after this agreement is made, the injured worker will NOT get future medical care and will not get any more money than was agreed to in the C&R.

A C&R ONLY occurs when the parties can come to an agreement on a reasonable dollar figure for a settlement. A judge cannot force an injured worker to “sell out” his or her right to future medical care.

Compromise & Release FAQ

Frequently asked questions about Compromise and Release:

About the Author: Attorney Eric Farber

Workers

Attorney Eric Farber is the founder of Pacific Workers’ Compensation Law Center. For more than 20 years, he has been in numerous high-stakes litigation battles and fought for the rights of professional athletes fighting through workers' compensation battles. He is an AV Rated attorney by Martindale Hubbel and has achieved numerous awards and honors for his the complex and litigated cases he has handled.