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North Dakota Truck Accident Back Injury Settlements

Compensation ranges, treatment costs, and how North Dakota's Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar) rule affects your Back Injury recovery.

Last Updated:April 2026
Sources:FMCSA, NHTSA, North Dakota Court Records
Data:Verified against 49 CFR Part 390–399
Reviewed by:Licensed Attorney

⚠️ North Dakota has a 6-year statute of limitations on truck accident claims. Acting quickly protects your right to compensation.

Back Injury in North Dakota: Quick Facts

FAULT RULE
Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar)
TIME TO FILE
6 Years
DAMAGES MULTIPLIER
3–6×
TREATMENT COST RANGE
$25K–$450K

How Much Is a Back Injury Settlement in North Dakota Truck Accidents?

Back Injury truck accident settlements in North Dakota typically use a 3x–6x damages multiplier. Settlements range from $68K to $1.4M, though severe cases involving surgery or permanent disability can exceed $1.4M. North Dakota's Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar) directly affects your final compensation amount.

North Dakota Back Injury Settlement Ranges by Severity

Severity LevelTypical Settlement Range
Herniated Disc, Conservative Treatment$68K$255K
Microdiscectomy / Surgical Treatment$195K$680K
Spinal Fusion / Permanent Disability$400K$1.4M

What Factors Determine a Truck Accident Settlement in North Dakota?

  • Injury severity and type of medical treatment required for Back Injury
  • North Dakota's Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar) and your assigned fault percentage
  • Economic damages: medical bills, lost wages, property damage
  • Non-economic damages: pain and suffering, emotional distress
  • Trucking company insurance policy limits (min. $750K federal)
  • Evidence of FMCSA violations (49 CFR Part 390–399)

Understanding Back Injury & Herniated Disc in Truck Accidents

Lumbar (lower back) injuries are the most common category of serious non-fatal injury in commercial truck accidents. The thoracolumbar spine is subject to extreme compressive and rotational forces in frontal, rear-end, and rollover crashes. Herniated discs — where the nucleus pulposus of an intervertebral disc breaches the annulus fibrosus and compresses adjacent nerve roots — cause the combination of local back pain and radiculopathy (sciatica) that is the hallmark of disc injury. Truck accident disc injuries frequently require surgical intervention and can produce permanent work disability.

Signs & Symptoms

  • Low back pain, often severe and sharp — rated 8–10/10 at injury onset
  • Radiculopathy (sciatica) — pain, burning, and numbness radiating from the back into buttock, leg, and foot (L4-S1 distribution)
  • Motor weakness in lower extremity — foot drop (L4-L5) or difficulty toe walking (S1)
  • Neurogenic claudication — leg pain and weakness worsening with walking
  • Bowel/bladder dysfunction — sign of cauda equina syndrome (surgical emergency)
  • Lumbar facet pain — local back pain worsening with extension
  • Muscle spasm and antalgic posture (leaning to one side)

Long-Term Effects

  • Adjacent segment disease — disc degeneration at spinal levels above and below fusion
  • Failed back surgery syndrome (FBSS) — persistent or worsening pain after surgery
  • Permanent work restrictions — lifting, bending, and prolonged sitting limitations
  • Narcotic dependency risk with long-term pain management
  • Chronic pain syndrome with associated depression and anxiety

Common Treatments

  • Conservative treatment: physical therapy, NSAIDs, muscle relaxants (6–12 weeks first-line)
  • Epidural steroid injections for radiculopathy
  • Microdiscectomy — minimally invasive disc removal for herniation with radiculopathy
  • Spinal fusion (TLIF/PLIF) — for instability, spondylolisthesis, or multi-level disease
  • Spinal cord stimulation — for failed back surgery syndrome
  • Post-surgical rehabilitation: 3–6 months of structured PT

Typical lifetime treatment cost range: $25K$450K (varies by injury severity, surgical needs, and ongoing care requirements)

Why Truck Accidents Cause Especially Severe Back Injury Injuries

Commercial truck crashes impose compressive spinal forces that can be 10–25× the forces generated in typical passenger vehicle accidents. Frontal impacts force the lumbar spine into severe flexion while the pelvis is held by the seatbelt, creating a lever-arm fracture and disc injury pattern. Rear-end impacts from a heavily loaded truck cause extreme hyperextension followed by hyperflexion, tearing the annulus fibrosus of lumbar discs. Rollover crashes add rotational forces that compound disc injury patterns. Many back injury victims arrive at the emergency department ambulatory and are cleared without spinal imaging — only to develop progressive radiculopathy over the following 24–72 hours as disc herniation worsens.

How North Dakota Law Affects Your Back Injury Settlement

North Dakota uses the 50% bar rule. This is governed by North Dakota Century Code § 32-03.2-02 (modified comparative fault, 50% bar).

North Dakota Fault Rule: Modified Comparative Fault (50% Bar)

Under N.D. Cent. Code § 32-03.2-02, you can recover if you are less than 50% at fault. Being assigned exactly 50% means no recovery — making fault allocation fights particularly intense in high-value Back Injury cases.

Example: Your damages are $2,500,000. You are found 35% at fault. Recovery: $2,500,000 × 0.65 = $1,625,000.

North Dakota Back Injury Settlement Ranges

Based on Back Injury & Herniated Disc economic damages and a 3–6× damages multiplier. Assumes 0% plaintiff fault. Actual amounts vary significantly based on injury severity, treatment needs, and case evidence.

Injury / Case ProfileEst. Settlement Range
Herniated Disc, Conservative Treatment$68K$255K
Microdiscectomy / Surgical Treatment$195K$680K
Spinal Fusion / Permanent Disability$400K$1.4M

Ranges represent 25th–90th percentile of estimated outcomes. Does not account for North Dakota fault deductions. Commercial truck policies typically carry $750K–$5M in coverage. High-value cases may require excess coverage claims.

Disclaimer: Settlement ranges shown are estimates based on general multiplier methods and publicly available data. They do not predict outcomes for any specific case. Every truck accident case is unique. Terms of Service

Key Evidence and Liability Factors in North Dakota Back Injury Cases

  • Pre-accident MRI comparison — if prior imaging exists, defense will claim pre-existing condition
  • Crash reconstruction biomechanics establishing spinal load exceeding disc injury threshold
  • Neurologist or neurosurgeon documenting clinical correlation between crash and disc injury
  • Functional capacity evaluation establishing permanent work restrictions
  • Life care plan for ongoing injection, medication, and surgical needs
  • Vocational expert for earning capacity loss from physical job restrictions
  • ELD records establishing truck speed and impact characteristics

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Frequently Asked Questions

Back Injury & Herniated Disc truck accident settlements in North Dakota typically use a damages multiplier of 3–6× economic damages. This reflects the significant non-economic (pain and suffering) component of Back Injury & Herniated Disc cases. Actual settlement amounts depend on injury severity, treatment costs, and how North Dakota's fault rules apply to your case. Use our free calculator for a personalized estimate.

Back Injury & Herniated Disc cases typically use a damages multiplier of 3x to 6x applied to economic damages (medical bills, lost wages, future costs). The multiplier reflects the non-economic component — pain, suffering, and impact on quality of life. Higher multipliers apply when surgery is required, when injuries are permanent, or when there is significant disfigurement.

In North Dakota, you have 6 years from the date of your accident to file. Missing this deadline typically bars you from recovery. For Back Injury & Herniated Disc cases, additional urgency applies: the truck's black box data is often overwritten within 30 days and dashcam footage within days. Consult an attorney immediately.

North Dakota uses modified comparative fault (50% bar rule). North Dakota uses the 50% bar rule. For example, if you are found 20% at fault, your settlement is reduced by 20%.

Liability in commercial truck accidents often extends beyond the driver. Potentially liable parties include: the trucking company (respondeat superior for driver's negligence; independent negligent hiring, training, and retention claims); the cargo owner or shipper if improper loading contributed to the crash; the truck or trailer manufacturer if a product defect was involved; a maintenance contractor if inadequate service caused a mechanical failure; and in some cases, the freight broker who arranged the shipment. Back Injury & Herniated Disc cases, given their high value, warrant thorough investigation of all potentially liable parties.

Get a Free Back Injury Case Evaluation

Connect with a truck accident attorney in North Dakota who handles back injury & herniated disc cases. Free consultation, no obligation — attorneys work on contingency.

What happens next?

1

A licensed truck accident attorney in your state reviews your submission — usually within hours.

2

They contact you for a free, no-obligation consultation to discuss the facts of your case.

3

If they take your case, they work on contingency — you pay nothing unless you win.

Attorney Advertising · Not a law firm · Not legal advice · Past results do not guarantee future outcomes · Settlement estimates are for informational purposes only and do not constitute legal advice or predict any specific outcome. Consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation. · © 2026 TruckSettlementPro