Connecticut Medical
Lien Calculator
Understand medical liens on your personal injury settlement in Connecticut.
Estimate your Connecticut Medical Lien
Understand medical liens on your personal injury settlement in Connecticut.
· Data sourced from Connecticut statutes and court fee schedules.
Important: This tool provides educational estimates only — not legal advice. Made For Law is not a law firm and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or connected to any federal, state, county, or local government agency or court system. Calculator results are based on statutory formulas and publicly available fee schedules — not AI. Supporting content is AI-assisted and editorially reviewed. Results may not reflect recent legislative changes or your specific circumstances. Do not rely solely on these estimates — always verify with official sources and consult a licensed attorney before making legal or financial decisions. Full disclaimer
Connecticut has a hospital lien law and does not follow the made-whole doctrine (Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 49-73 to 49-73b).
Key Takeaways
- Hospital lien statute: Yes (Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 49-73 to 49-73b)
- Made-whole doctrine: No — insurer can take subrogation immediately
- ERISA self-funded plans: Federal law preempts state protections
- Medicare liens: Non-negotiable on amount but reduced by pro-rata attorney fees
Key facts for Connecticut medical lien
What drives medical lien in Connecticut

Medical Liens in Connecticut
When you receive medical treatment after an accident in Connecticut, the healthcare providers who treat you may assert a lien against your personal injury settlement or verdict. A medical lien is a legal claim that gives the provider a right to be paid from the proceeds of your case before you receive your share.
These liens can come from hospitals, ambulance services, health insurance companies, Medicaid, and Medicare — and they can dramatically reduce the amount you ultimately take home.
Connecticut is one of 44 states with a hospital lien statute (Conn. Gen.
Stat. §§ 49-73 to 49-73b), which gives hospitals a statutory right to file a lien on your personal injury recovery for the reasonable value of services provided.
Understanding how each type of medical lien works in Connecticut is critical to protecting your settlement and ensuring you receive fair compensation for your injuries.
The total lien burden on a personal injury case in Connecticut can vary from a few thousand dollars for minor injuries to hundreds of thousands for catastrophic cases involving ICU stays, surgery, or long-term rehabilitation. Negotiating these liens down is often one of the most important steps in maximizing your net recovery.
The Connecticut Department of Social Services (DSS) asserts Medicaid liens under Conn. Gen.
Stat. § 17b-94.
Connecticut does not have a hospital lien statute — hospital collections are pursued through the estate or contractual means. Major Connecticut hospital systems asserting liens include Yale New Haven Health, Hartford HealthCare, and Nuvance Health.
Connecticut's DSS Third Party Liability unit reviews all settlements involving Medicaid recipients and asserts lien rights; the lien equals the total Medicaid payments made for the injury. Connecticut applies the made-whole doctrine to private health insurer subrogation under Torres v.
Caterpillar, Inc. (Conn.
App. 2006).
Hospital Lien Laws in Connecticut
Connecticut's hospital lien statute (Conn. Gen.
Stat. §§ 49-73 to 49-73b) allows hospitals to file a lien against your personal injury claim for the reasonable charges of medical care related to the injury.
The lien attaches to any cause of action, settlement, or judgment arising from the accident that caused the injuries requiring treatment.
To perfect a hospital lien in Connecticut, the hospital must typically file a notice of lien with the appropriate county recorder's office and serve copies on the injured person and the liable party (or their insurer). The lien must be filed within the statutory time period — failure to comply with these notice requirements can invalidate the lien entirely, which is one of the first things an experienced personal injury attorney will check.
Hospital lien amounts in Connecticut are limited to the "reasonable value" of services provided, not necessarily the full billed charges. This is an important distinction: hospital chargemaster rates are often 3–10x higher than what insurers actually pay.
You or your attorney can challenge a hospital lien that exceeds reasonable and customary charges, potentially reducing it by 40–70%.

Health Insurance Subrogation in Connecticut
If your health insurance paid for accident-related treatment in Connecticut, the insurer likely has a subrogation right — meaning they can demand reimbursement from your personal injury settlement. The key distinction is whether your plan is "self-funded" (ERISA) or "fully insured" (state-regulated).
This single factor often determines whether Connecticut law or federal law controls the subrogation claim.
Self-funded employer plans are governed by ERISA (the Employee Retirement Income Security Act), which preempts state law. Under ERISA, the plan's subrogation language controls, and Connecticut's consumer-protection statutes generally cannot override it.
The U.S. Supreme Court's decision in US Airways v.
McCutchen (2013) confirmed that ERISA plans can enforce subrogation terms as written, though equitable defenses may apply. If your employer self-funds its health plan, expect the insurer to assert full subrogation rights regardless of Connecticut law.
Fully insured plans — purchased from a commercial insurer like Blue Cross, Aetna, or UnitedHealthcare — are regulated by Connecticut state law. Connecticut does not follow the made-whole doctrine, meaning your health insurer may be entitled to full subrogation recovery from your settlement even if you have not been fully compensated for your injuries.
This can make a significant difference in how much of your settlement you keep.
Medicaid & Medicare Liens in Connecticut
Federal law gives both Medicaid and Medicare automatic lien rights against personal injury recoveries — and these rights apply in every state regardless of state law. Connecticut DSS has statutory lien on PI recoveries for Medicaid recipients.
If Medicaid paid for your accident-related treatment, you must resolve the Medicaid lien before distributing settlement proceeds.
Medicare's lien rights under the Medicare Secondary Payer Act (MSP Act) are particularly powerful. Medicare has a direct right of recovery against any personal injury settlement, and the penalties for failing to properly resolve Medicare liens are severe.
You must notify Medicare of any pending claim and obtain a final demand letter before settling. The Medicare recovery amount is non-negotiable on the principal amount, though Medicare does reduce its claim proportionally based on your attorney fees and litigation costs under 42 CFR § 411.37.
An important 2022 development affects Medicaid lien strategy in all states, including Connecticut: in Gallardo v. Marstiller (596 U.S.
122 (2022)), the U.S. Supreme Court held that states may seek Medicaid reimbursement from the portions of a personal injury settlement allocated to future medical expenses — not just past medical costs.
This partially supersedes the earlier Ahlborn rule (2006), which limited Medicaid recovery strictly to the settlement share representing past medical expenses. As a result, Medicaid liens can now attach to a larger share of your settlement than was previously understood.
Consult with an attorney familiar with Medicaid lien law in Connecticut to properly apportion and minimize the Medicaid recovery.
In Connecticut, the practical impact is that both Medicaid and Medicare liens must be resolved as a priority before distributing settlement funds. Your attorney should send notice to CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) early in the case, request conditional payment amounts, and negotiate the final demand.
Failure to properly address these liens can result in personal liability for the attorney and the plaintiff.
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Made Whole Doctrine in Connecticut
Connecticut does not follow the made-whole doctrine, which means health insurers and lienholders can pursue full subrogation recovery from your personal injury settlement even if you have not been fully compensated for your injuries. This is a significant disadvantage for plaintiffs in Connecticut compared to the approximately 35 states that do apply the doctrine.
Without made-whole protection in Connecticut, if your health insurer paid $50,000 in medical bills and you settle your case for $100,000, the insurer can demand full reimbursement of the $50,000 — even if your actual damages were $300,000 and you are far from "made whole." This can leave plaintiffs with a fraction of their settlement after liens, attorney fees, and costs are paid.
However, plaintiffs in Connecticut still have options for reducing subrogation claims. Common law equitable principles, such as the "common fund" doctrine (which reduces subrogation by the plaintiff's share of attorney fees and costs), may apply.
Additionally, some courts in states without the made-whole doctrine have recognized equitable defenses when enforcing subrogation would be unconscionable. An experienced personal injury attorney can negotiate these reductions.

Negotiating & Reducing Medical Liens in Connecticut
Lien negotiation is one of the most impactful things a personal injury attorney does in Connecticut — it directly determines how much money you take home. Common strategies include: (1) challenging the lien amount by comparing billed charges to Medicare reimbursement rates or usual-and-customary charges, (2) asserting the common-fund doctrine to reduce the lien by your pro-rata share of attorney fees and costs, and (3) negotiating a global reduction with the lienholder in exchange for prompt payment.
Hospital liens in Connecticut are often the most negotiable. Even though the lien is statutory, hospitals frequently accept 30–50 cents on the dollar rather than risk delay or litigation.
Health insurance subrogation claims are harder to negotiate for ERISA plans (where the plan language controls), but state-regulated plan claims in Connecticut may still be reduced through common-fund arguments and direct negotiation.
Medicaid liens in Connecticut can sometimes be negotiated by demonstrating hardship or by invoking the Ahlborn decision (Arkansas Dept. of Health & Human Servs.
v. Ahlborn, 547 U.S.
268 (2006)), which limits Medicaid's recovery to the portion of the settlement that represents medical expenses. Medicare liens have less flexibility on the principal amount, but the 42 CFR § 411.37 procurement cost reduction is automatic.
Key reference: Conn. Gen.
Stat. §§ 49-73 to 49-73b.
Questions families ask about Connecticut medical lien
Edited and reviewed by our editorial team. Answers are general information — not legal advice.
Can I negotiate medical liens in Connecticut?
Yes. Hospital liens, health insurance subrogation claims, and even Medicaid liens can often be reduced through negotiation. Hospital liens filed under Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 49-73 to 49-73b are commonly negotiated to 30–50% of the original amount. An experienced personal injury attorney can typically save you thousands in lien reductions.
Does Connecticut have hospital lien laws?
Yes. Connecticut's hospital lien statute (Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 49-73 to 49-73b) allows hospitals to file a lien against your personal injury settlement for the reasonable value of services provided. The lien must be properly filed and served to be enforceable.
What about Medicaid liens in Connecticut?
Connecticut DSS has statutory lien on PI recoveries for Medicaid recipients Federal law (42 U.S.C. § 1396k) requires Medicaid liens to be resolved before settlement funds are distributed. However, the Ahlborn decision limits Medicaid recovery to the medical-expense portion of the settlement. For Medicare's coordination of benefits and lien recovery process, see CMS Medicare lien information.
Does the made-whole doctrine apply in Connecticut?
No. Connecticut does not follow the made-whole doctrine, so insurers can pursue subrogation even if you haven't been fully compensated. However, common-fund and equitable defenses may still reduce the subrogation amount.
Can ERISA plans override Connecticut lien protections?
Yes. Self-funded employer health plans governed by ERISA are not subject to Connecticut state insurance laws, including the common-fund doctrine as applied by state courts. The plan's own subrogation language controls under federal law.
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Medical Lien Calculator in states that border Connecticut
Key statutes: Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-107
Sources
- Connecticut Judicial Branch — civil court procedures and lien enforcement
- Connecticut General Statutes — Legislature — hospital lien statutes and subrogation rules
- Connecticut Bar Association — personal injury attorney resources and directory
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Open the calculatorLegal information, not legal advice. The Medical Lien Calculator for Connecticut produces estimates based on public fee schedules and state statutes. Actual costs vary by case. For advice about your situation, consult a licensed Connecticut attorney.
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