Quality of life is a recognized component of non-economic damages in a Washington personal injury claim or lawsuit, and it reflects the ways an injury diminishes your ability to enjoy everyday activities, relationships, and independence. State law allows injured individuals to recover compensation for losses like pain, suffering, inconvenience, and loss of enjoyment of life.
If a preventable accident has changed the way you live, our empathetic team at Dean Standish Perkins & Associates wants to hear your story. Call us at (206) 467-0701 for a free case evaluation.
An injury doesn’t just heal and disappear. For many people, the physical and emotional toll lingers, reshaping daily routines, hobbies, and personal connections for months or even years. Some common examples of lost quality of life include:
No two injury cases look alike, and the compensation you may receive depends on the specific details of your situation. Washington’s pure comparative fault system under RCW 4.22.005 also affects your recovery if you share any portion of fault for the accident:
Unlike economic damages such as medical bills or lost wages, quality of life losses have no invoice attached. Insurance adjusters and juries use several methods to assign a dollar value to these non-economic harms. One of the most common approaches is the multiplier method, where your total economic damages are multiplied by a number (typically between 1.5 and 5) based on the severity and permanence of your injuries. A more serious, long-term injury justifies a higher multiplier.
Strong evidence plays a significant role in supporting your damages demand. Useful documentation includes:
Washington does not cap non-economic damages in most personal injury cases, which means thorough documentation directly affects the value of your claim.
Our firm has 39 years of personal injury experience. We are a boutique firm, priding ourselves on a personalized, friendly approach and regular client communication. We believe in relieving client stress by handling all aspects of the case. Our lawyers always go the extra mile for the people we represent, whether that means meeting on weekends, in the evenings, at a local coffee shop, at the hospital, or even at your home.
Loss of consortium is a related claim that allows a spouse or close family member to seek compensation for the loss of companionship, affection, and support caused by your injury. In Washington, it is filed alongside the primary personal injury claim and is often presented together with quality of life damages.
Insurers and defense attorneys commonly argue either failure to mitigate (that you did not follow medical advice, limiting your own recovery) or comparative fault, which reduces your total damages by your percentage of responsibility. Consistent medical treatment and thorough documentation are the most effective counters to both arguments.
Most personal injury attorneys, including our team, work on a contingency fee basis. You pay nothing up front and owe no attorney fees unless your case results in a financial recovery through a settlement or court verdict.
Waiting to take action after an injury can weaken your claim and put valuable evidence at risk. Call Dean Standish Perkins & Associates at (206) 467-0701 or contact us online for a free case evaluation with our King County personal injury lawyers. We will work to pursue every dollar of compensation your injuries warrant.