If you've been seriously injured because of someone else's negligence, you're likely dealing with a lot at once. Physical pain, time off work, medical appointments, and a stack of paperwork from an insurance company that seems to move faster than you can think. Meanwhile, the questions pile up. How long will this take? What does a lawyer actually do, and when should you get one involved? On top of all of that, you may be wondering whether you even have a personal injury case, and if you do, what happens next.
The legal process in Ontario follows a clear structure, even when individual cases vary in complexity and timeline. Understanding the stages of a personal injury case from the first consultation through to settlement or trial helps you make better decisions, ask better questions, and work more effectively with your legal team. It also helps you recognize when something isn't going the way it should. Most importantly, it puts you in a position to protect your own interests at every step.
This guide is written for Ontario residents at the beginning of that process. We'll walk through each stage in plain language, including what to expect from your lawyer, when the key decisions get made, and what factors shape the final outcome of your claim. Whether you're still weighing your options or you've already decided to move forward, this is where to start.
Key Takeaways
A free initial consultation means a no-cost, no-obligation meeting in which a personal injury lawyer reviews the facts of your situation, assesses whether you have a viable claim, and explains your legal options. It isn't meant to be a high-pressure sales pitch, and you're under no obligation to hire anyone after the meeting. At Strype Injury Lawyers, the free personal injury case consultation is a genuine evaluation. We only take on cases we believe we can win.
The purpose of your first meeting is to give your lawyer a clear picture of what happened, who may be legally responsible, and what the injury has cost you. You don't need to arrive with organized documentation or a prepared summary; your lawyer will guide the conversation. That said, the more detail you can share about the incident, your medical treatment, and your financial situation, the more useful the initial assessment will be.
The conversation will typically cover:
If the firm decides to take your case, you'll sign a retainer agreement. In personal injury law, this is almost always a contingency fee agreement, meaning the firm earns its legal fee only if you recover compensation. You pay nothing upfront. At Strype, all disbursements (including medical expert reports, court filing fees, and investigation costs) are advanced by the firm at its own risk. There are no out-of-pocket costs to you at any point in the process. The contingency model is designed to ensure that access to justice isn't dependent on your financial situation.
Yes, in limited circumstances. Typically, if a client becomes uncooperative, provides materially false information, or if new facts emerge that make the case legally unviable, then the personal injury case could be dropped. These situations are uncommon when the lawyer is clear about expectations from the start. Equally, clients always have the right to change personal injury case lawyers at any time. That right doesn't expire, and it doesn't require any particular reason. The most important thing is that you feel confident in and comfortable with the representation you've chosen before signing anything.
Once you've retained a personal injury lawyer, the investigation phase begins. From your perspective, this stage may feel quiet. You won't be in the room for most of it. But this is where the evidentiary foundation of your case is built, and it's where outcomes are frequently determined. A thorough, well-documented record almost always produces a stronger result.
The quality of evidence gathered during this phase affects every downstream stage of the personal injury case, including the credibility of your position at mediation, the strength of your expert witnesses if the case goes to trial, and ultimately, the size of the compensation you're able to recover.
Investigation in a personal injury case typically involves:
At Strype, one meaningful difference in this phase is the firm's in-house nursing staff, who review complex medical files before they go to external experts. This means the medical analysis is more targeted and the instructions given to outside specialists are more precise, resulting in stronger expert reports. For cases involving catastrophic injuries, acquired brain injuries, or surgical complications, that internal medical fluency matters. Most personal injury firms in Ontario don't have this capability.
Once the investigation is sufficiently developed, a Statement of Claim is filed with the Ontario court. This formally initiates the lawsuit and notifies the defendant that they are being sued. It's important to know that Ontario's general limitation period for personal injury claims is two years from the date of injury. Missing this deadline eliminates your right to pursue a claim in almost all cases. After the defendant files a Statement of Defence, the case enters the discovery phase. During examinations for discovery, lawyers for both sides question the opposing party under oath. This is where each side gains a full picture of the evidence the other intends to rely on, and where inconsistencies often surface.
|
Stage |
Approximate Timeframe |
|
Consultation and retention |
Week 1–2 |
|
Investigation and document gathering |
Months 1–6 |
|
Statement of Claim issued |
Months 3–6 |
|
Examinations for discovery |
12–18 months post-pleading |
|
Mediation |
18–30 months post-pleading |
|
Trial (if required) |
3–5+ years from incident |
These timelines reflect average personal injury case management in Ontario civil litigation. The actual timeline for your specific case will depend on the complexity of your injuries, the number of defendants, the availability of expert witnesses, and court scheduling, all of which can affect how quickly your matter progresses.
Mediation is a structured, confidential negotiation facilitated by a neutral third party (typically a retired judge or senior litigator) in which both sides attempt to reach a settlement before proceeding to trial. In Ontario, mediation is mandatory in Toronto, Ottawa, and Essex County for civil actions. Outside those jurisdictions, mediation is not required but is widely used across the province because it's effective; the large majority of personal injury cases that reach mediation resolve there, without the cost and uncertainty of trial being necessary.
Understanding how mediation works in a personal injury case helps you prepare for what's ahead:
The strength of your position at mediation is a direct reflection of the preparation that came before it. A complete medical record, credible and well-instructed expert opinions, and a demonstrated willingness to proceed to trial: these are the factors that move an insurer from a low opening offer to a number that actually reflects your losses.
Timing is a critical factor when it comes to personal injury case settlements. Settling too early is one of the most preventable and costly mistakes an injured person can make, and it's a mistake that insurers actively try to encourage. From the day you report your injury, insurance adjusters are trained to move toward closure as quickly as possible, before the full picture of your losses is clear.
A settlement should only be considered when:
Signing a release too early permanently locks in a number that can never be revisited, regardless of how your condition changes. Your lawyer's role is to protect you from that outcome by ensuring the settlement offer reflects the actual cost of the injury, now and into the future. A trial-ready firm has considerably more leverage at the mediation table than one with a reputation for closing files quickly.
Damages in Ontario personal injury cases fall into several recognized categories. The total value of a claim depends on the specific facts, the severity of the injury, and the strength of the supporting evidence.
Here are the main categories your lawyer will assess:
|
Damage Category |
What It Covers |
|
General damages |
Pain and suffering and loss of enjoyment of life. In motor vehicle accident cases below the catastrophic impairment threshold, these are subject to a statutory deductible and cap. No cap applies to catastrophic injuries or medical malpractice claims. |
|
Special damages |
Documented out-of-pocket losses to the date of settlement or trial, including prescription costs, rehabilitation expenses, and income loss supported by employment records and pay stubs. |
|
Future care costs |
A future care cost report from a rehabilitation specialist, combined with actuarial analysis, converts lifelong care needs into a present-day dollar value. In serious injury cases, this is often the largest component of the claim. |
|
Future income loss |
Calculated using expert evidence about your remaining functional capacity and projected lifetime earnings had the injury not occurred. |
|
Family Law Act claims |
A seriously injured person’s spouse, children, and parents may have independent claims for loss of care, guidance, and companionship. These run alongside the injured person’s own claim. |
In cases involving motor vehicle accidents, one factor that can significantly change the available compensation is catastrophic impairment designation under the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule (SABS). A catastrophic designation unlocks a substantially higher tier of accident benefits (including enhanced income replacement and attendant care funding) and affects the damages calculation in the tort claim as well. Because qualifying for catastrophic impairment depends on how the medical evidence is organized and presented, Strype's in-house medical expertise gives clients a meaningful advantage in ensuring they're properly assessed when the severity of their injury may meet that threshold.
Most personal injury cases in Ontario settle before reaching trial, but this outcome depends on the credible threat of trial being present at every earlier stage. An insurer negotiating with a firm known for settling quickly and quietly will make lower offers. An insurer negotiating with a firm that has a documented track record of going to court and winning will approach the same case very differently. In other words, trial-readiness is an active factor in how your case is valued from the moment it's filed.
If a case doesn't resolve at mediation, the following steps apply:
Strype Injury Lawyers has conducted more than 250 trials over 45 years. That record is one of the main reasons insurers take the firm's cases more seriously at every earlier stage of the process. When the opposing side knows that Strype will go to trial if the offer isn't right, the negotiation at mediation looks very different from the start.
A personal injury case in Ontario moves through four key stages:
These stages can take years. At every stage, the quality of your legal representation directly shapes what you're offered, and whether that offer reflects your actual losses.
The details that matter most aren't always visible from the outside:
These aren't abstract questions. They determine the difference between a result that covers your long-term care and income needs and one that falls far short.
If you're not sure what your case involves or whether you even have a claim worth pursuing, the best first step is a conversation with a lawyer who'll tell you the truth, not just what you want to hear.
One thing worth understanding before you retain a lawyer: the contingency fee model is regulated in Ontario under Ontario Regulation 563/20. Your retainer agreement must set out the contingency fee percentage clearly, and that percentage cannot exceed what the regulation permits. Ask your lawyer to walk you through the retainer before signing, and make sure you understand how disbursements (the out-of-pocket costs the firm advances) are handled if the case resolves. A firm with genuine financial resources to advance significant disbursements is in a very different position from one that settles early partly because it can't sustain a long-running file.
Personal injury case law in Ontario continues to evolve, and how cases are valued, particularly catastrophic and long-term injury files, can shift with new court decisions and regulatory changes. Staying current matters. Strype's litigation team actively tracks developments in personal injury case law, including changes to the SABS, updated sentencing principles in tort cases, and emerging trends in damages assessment. That ongoing awareness directly informs the advice you'll receive at every stage of your case.
If you've been injured in Ontario, start with a free, no-obligation personal injury case evaluation.
At Strype Injury Lawyers, we'll walk you through what your case involves, what the process looks like from here, and what you can realistically expect, before you sign anything. Don't talk to the insurance company. Talk to us.
Legal Disclaimer: The information in this article is intended for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every personal injury claim is unique, and the facts of your situation may affect your legal rights and options. If you have been injured or believe you may have a legal claim, contact a qualified personal injury lawyer in Ontario as soon as possible.