Short answer: Almost every Illinois personal injury lawyer works on a contingency fee, which means you pay nothing out of pocket. The lawyer takes a percentage of the recovery, typically 33.3% if the case settles before a lawsuit is filed and 40% if the case proceeds into litigation. If there is no recovery, you owe no fee. Case costs (filing fees, deposition transcripts, expert witnesses, medical records) are usually advanced by the firm and reimbursed from the recovery. The total cost-to-client of hiring a Chicago personal injury lawyer is therefore zero up front and a defined percentage of whatever the case produces.
In my experience handling Illinois personal injury cases, the contingency-fee structure is what allows injury victims to retain experienced counsel regardless of their financial situation. A client who could never afford an hourly rate of $500 per hour can get the same attorney’s full attention on contingency. This guide explains how the math works and what to look for in a fee agreement.
Standard Illinois Contingency Fee Structure
| Case stage | Typical fee |
|---|---|
| Settles pre-suit (before lawsuit filed) | 33.3% of recovery |
| Settles after lawsuit filed but before trial | 40% of recovery |
| Resolved at or after trial | 40% of recovery (some firms charge 45% if appellate work) |
| Workers’ compensation cases | 20% of recovery (statutory cap) |
| Medical malpractice cases | 33.3% under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 1.5 sliding scale |
The percentages above are typical for Chicago. Most reputable firms operate at these tiers; some may negotiate slightly different terms on very large cases or unusual fact patterns.
What’s Included in the Fee
The contingency fee covers everything the lawyer does on the case:
- Initial case evaluation and intake
- Medical records collection and review
- Investigation and evidence preservation
- Demand letter drafting and pre-suit negotiation
- Drafting and filing the complaint
- Discovery (written discovery, document production, depositions)
- Motion practice
- Mediation
- Trial preparation and trial
- Settlement negotiation and document drafting
- Lien resolution with hospitals, ERISA plans, Medicare, Medicaid
Lien negotiation alone often saves the client more than the lawyer’s fee on a moderate-sized case. The contingency structure aligns the lawyer’s interest with the client’s: the lawyer earns more when the net recovery to the client is larger.
Case Costs: Separate From the Fee
Case costs are the out-of-pocket expenses the lawyer pays to move the case forward. Typical costs:
- Filing fees ($300 to $500 in Cook County)
- Service of process fees
- Medical records fees ($25 to $500 per provider)
- Deposition transcripts ($500 to $2,000 each)
- Expert witness fees ($1,000 to $25,000 per expert)
- Accident reconstruction ($3,000 to $15,000)
- Trial exhibits and demonstratives ($500 to $5,000)
- Court reporter and videographer fees for trial
Most firms advance these costs and reimburse from the recovery. The cost reimbursement comes out of the gross settlement before the contingency fee is calculated, or after, depending on the fee agreement. Read the agreement to confirm. If the case loses, most reputable firms eat the costs – they do not pursue the client for them.
A Worked Example
Settlement: $250,000. Costs advanced by firm: $12,000. Fee structure: 33.3% (settled pre-suit), costs deducted before fee.
- Gross settlement: $250,000
- Less costs: -$12,000
- Net before fee: $238,000
- Attorney fee (33.3% of $238,000): $79,254
- Net before liens: $158,746
- Hospital lien (after reduction): $30,000
- ERISA lien (after reduction): $18,000
- Final client recovery: $110,746
If the same case had been hourly-billed at $500/hour and required 200 attorney hours, the legal bill alone would have been $100,000 – and the client would have paid it out of pocket, win or lose. Contingency is the only realistic option for most Illinois injury victims.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are there any upfront fees?
Reputable Illinois personal injury firms do not charge consultation fees, retainer fees, or any upfront cost. If a firm asks for money up front for an injury case, that is a sign to look elsewhere.
Can I negotiate the contingency percentage?
Sometimes, especially on high-value cases or unusual fact patterns. Most firms hold to standard rates on routine cases. Asking for a discount may produce a small reduction; pushing too hard may make the firm walk away.
What happens to the fee if I fire my lawyer mid-case?
If you change lawyers, the first lawyer typically has a lien on the eventual recovery for the value of work performed (a “quantum meruit” claim). The new lawyer and the prior lawyer divide the fee. The client’s total fee burden does not change.
Does the firm get paid if I lose?
No. Contingency means no fee if no recovery. Most reputable firms also write off the costs if the case loses, though some agreements allow the firm to pursue the client for costs. Read the cost-recovery provision carefully.
Are contingency fees taxable to the client?
Generally no. The portion paid to the lawyer is not income to the client for tax purposes in most personal injury settlements. Some structured settlements and certain damage types have different treatment; coordinate with a CPA.
Authoritative Sources
- Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct (Rule 1.5 – Fees)
- Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission
- Illinois Courts
