Non-Economic Damages in a California Personal Injury Case
Non-Economic Damages in a California Personal Injury Case
An injury changes more than your schedule and your finances. It changes how you feel, what you can do, and in some cases, who you are able to be for the people around you. California law recognizes those losses.
Under California Civil Code §1431.2, they are known as non-economic damages and may be recoverable in a personal injury claim.
Non-economic damages are the human side of a personal injury claim. They sit alongside economic damages, which cover documented financial losses. Together they form the full picture of what you may be entitled to recover.
Types of Non-Economic Damages
The impact of an injury is personal. California jury instruction CACI 3905A tells juries there is no fixed formula for calculating these losses. California law recognizes the following categories of non-economic loss.
Physical Pain And Suffering
Physical pain and suffering covers the actual sensation of pain caused by the injury. This includes:
- Acute pain from the initial injury
- Discomfort during surgery and rehabilitation
- Chronic pain that remains after treatment ends
- Residual pain from nerve damage or permanent conditions
Medical records, treatment notes, and personal journals documenting daily pain levels help support this category.
Emotional Distress
Emotional distress covers the psychological impact of an injury. California recognizes the following as independently compensable:
- Anxiety and generalized anxiety disorder
- Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
- Depression
- Panic disorders
- Fear of driving or returning to the location of the accident
Therapy records, mental health diagnoses, and treatment documentation strengthen this category significantly. In most personal injury cases, emotional distress is claimed alongside physical injury rather than as a standalone damage.
Loss Of Enjoyment Of Life
Loss of enjoyment of life covers the activities and experiences the injured person can no longer participate in. These may include:
- Sports and physical activities
- Hobbies and creative pursuits
- Social activities and community participation
- Travel
- Time with children or grandchildren
Personal journals, statements from family members, and before-and-after accounts of daily life help document this loss.
Disfigurement
Disfigurement covers permanent physical changes to appearance caused by the injury. These may include:
- Visible scarring from lacerations or surgery
- Burn injuries
- Facial injuries affecting appearance
- Permanent physical deformity
Photographs taken at regular intervals after the injury, along with medical records, help document disfigurement over time.
Physical Impairment
Physical impairment covers permanent limitations in physical function caused by the injury. These may include:
- Reduced range of motion
- Chronic weakness
- Nerve damage
- Limitations that affect work, daily tasks, and independence
Medical records, imaging results, and physician testimony help establish the nature and permanence of the impairment.
Inconvenience
Inconvenience covers the daily disruption caused by the injury. This may include:
- Inability to bathe or dress independently
- Inability to drive to appointments
- Reliance on others for household tasks
- Loss of daily routines and independence
Written accounts of daily limitations, statements from caregivers, and medical records support this category.
Loss Of Consortium
Loss of consortium is a separate claim belonging to a lawfully married spouse or registered domestic partner. It covers:
- Loss of companionship and affection
- Loss of support and care
- Loss of intimacy
- Changes to the marital relationship caused by the injury
Many spouses do not know the claim exists until someone explains it to them. If your partner was injured and your relationship has changed as a result, that loss has legal recognition in California.
How Non-Economic Damages Are Calculated
Unlike economic damages, there is no standard formula for calculating non-economic losses. Two methods shape most negotiations and verdicts.
Multiplier Method
The multiplier method takes total economic damages and multiplies by a number between 1.5 and 5.
- 1.5 to 2: Minor injuries with full recovery and no lasting impact
- 2.5 to 3.5: Moderate injuries requiring surgery or extended recovery
- 4 to 5: Severe injuries with significant permanent limitations
- Above 5: Catastrophic injuries including spinal cord damage and traumatic brain injury
Per Diem Method
The per diem method assigns a daily dollar value to the suffering and multiplies by the number of days affected. Juries often find this approach persuasive because abstract suffering becomes concrete and countable. This method works best for injuries with a defined recovery arc.
How Insurers Calculate These Damages
Insurance companies use proprietary software to calculate non-economic damages during the claims process. These tools are designed to produce valuations below what a jury would likely award. An attorney who understands how that software weights different injury types can counter its output with evidence, expert testimony, and documentation the algorithm does not account for.
Why Documentation Matters
Non-economic damages are harder to prove than economic damages because they do not come with receipts. The strength of this side of a claim depends on consistent, detailed documentation from day one.
- Keep a daily journal noting pain levels, emotional state, and activities no longer possible
- Attend all medical and mental health appointments consistently
- Ask treating physicians to document functional limitations in detail
- Save communications with family members about how the injury has changed daily life
Gaps in treatment or documentation give insurers room to argue that the impact of the injury was less significant than claimed.
Contact An Experienced California Personal Injury Lawyer
Non-economic damages are rarely offered at full value in an initial settlement. An attorney can identify every category that applies to your situation, build the documentation needed to support it, and present that loss clearly to an insurer or jury.
Contact our Torrance office and someone from our team will follow up, ask about your situation, and walk you through what your case may be worth. No Fees Unless We Recover. (310) 431-9875