Skip to content
  • 678.916.9387
  • info@schneiderwilliamson.com
  • En español
  • About Us

    Our Lawyers

    • Jason Schneider, Co-Founder & Managing Partner
    • Campbell Williamson, Co-Founder & Partner
    • Evelyn Graham, Attorney
    Meet Our Team
    Our Values

    Personal Injury FAQ

    Get answers to your personal injury claim and litigation questions from Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys
    See All FAQs
  • Personal Injury

    Practice Areas

    • Car Accidents
    • Catastrophic Injuries
    • Negligent Security
    • Premises Liability
    • Product Liability
    • Slip & Fall Accidents
    • Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBI)
    • Tractor-Trailer Accidents
    • Wrongful Death
  • Results

    Hear What Our Clients Say

    30x What The Insurance Companies Originally Offered

    In the end [he] achieved a settlement for me roughly 30 times what the insurance companies originally offered.
    See All Testimonials

    $2,500,000 for car accident compensation

    $2.5M settlement for a mother and her two children killed in an accident caused by a flooded highway.

    See All Case Results
  • Blog
  • Referrals

    Referrals

    • Lawyers
    • Chiropractors
Request Free Consultation
  • En español

Economic vs. Non-Economic Damages in Georgia

Atlanta car accident litigation attorneys who take your personal injuries personally
Request A Free Consultation
Tips to Maximize Recovery

Catastrophic Injury Settlement

Traumatic Brain Injury

$7,850,000

Tractor Trailer Accident Settlement

Multiple Shoulder Injuries

$2,850,000

Slip & Fall Settlement

Multiple injuries from slip and fall in a grocery store

$500,000

Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Settlement

Injury after shuttle bus collision

$1,750,000

Wrongful Death Settlement

Worker Killed in Industrial Explosion

$15,000,000

Road Defect Settlement

Mother & Two Children Killed

$2,500,000

Truck Accident Settlement

Back Injuries Sustained in Tractor-Trailer Accident

$1,110,000

Premises Liability Verdict

Slip & Fall Accident in a Condominium Complex

$840,000

Negligent Security Settlement

Failure to Protect Plaintiff

$1,000,000

Head Injury Verdict

Teen nearly drowned at public swimming pool

$5,000,000

Truck Accident Settlement

Client killed in tractor-trailer collision

$1,666,666

Wrongful Death Verdict

Pilot killed in small plane crash

$1,500,000

Car Accident Settlement

Back injury that required multiple surgeries

$1,350,000

Premises Liability Settlement

Slip-and-fall foot injury

$1,000,000

Car Accident Verdict

Wrongful death and catastrophic injuries

$1,000,000

Car Accident Verdict

Multiple injuries in commercial box truck collision

$850,000

Personal Injury Settlement

Catastrophic injuries from negligent police chase

$1,250,000

Wrongful Death Verdict

Young woman and fiancé killed in parasailing accident

$1,000,000

Car Accident Settlement

Motorcyclist sustained multiple injuries in collision

$600,000

Premises Liability Settlement

Slip-and-fall in a grocery store

$500,000

Premises Liability Settlement

Trip-and-fall at a mall that required back surgery

$475,000

Car Accident Settlement

Traumatic brain injury after commercial vehicle collision

$450,000

Car Accident Settlement

Shoulder injury from sideswipe collision on interstate

$370,000

Car Accident Settlement

Multiple injuries in a sanitation truck collision

$450,000

Car Accident Settlement

Multiple injuries from rear end collision

$250,000

Case Results & Settlements

Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys attorneys have a proven track record of results that includes securing six, seven, and eight figure compensation for clients

See All Results

When people ask what their personal injury case is worth, they are really asking about damages, the dollar value Georgia law puts on what an accident has taken from them. Georgia divides compensatory damages into two main categories, economic and non-economic, and a smaller third category called punitive damages applies in a narrow set of cases. Each category has its own rules, its own evidence requirements, and its own strategic considerations. Understanding the difference between them is essential to evaluating any settlement offer. The trial team at Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys has recovered millions of dollars across both categories for injured Georgians, and this guide explains how each one works.

Economic Damages: The Bills You Can Add Up

Economic damages, sometimes called special damages, are the financial losses caused by an accident that can be calculated with documents. These are the costs you can prove with receipts, invoices, pay stubs, and reports from accountants or vocational analysts. Common categories of economic damages in Georgia personal injury cases include:

Past medical bills. Every dollar of treatment from the date of the accident through the date of settlement or trial, including ER visits, ambulance bills, surgery, hospitalization, prescription medication, imaging, physical therapy, chiropractic care, and mental health treatment.

Future medical expenses. Projected costs for ongoing treatment, future surgeries, in-home care, durable medical equipment, and prescriptions, typically supported by treating physician testimony and life care planners in serious cases.

Lost wages. Income missed during recovery, including paid time off used, sick days burned through, and overtime that would have been available.

Loss of future earning capacity. A larger and more complex calculation that addresses how the injury changes your ability to earn over your remaining work life. This is especially important in catastrophic cases or cases involving permanent disability following a Sandy Springs car accident or Sandy Springs truck accident.

Property damage. The cost to repair or replace a totaled vehicle, replacement value of personal items damaged in the crash, and rental car expenses while you were without transportation.

Out-of-pocket expenses. Mileage to medical appointments, copays, parking, home modifications (such as ramps or grab bars), and household services you had to hire out because of your injuries.

Non-Economic Damages: The Losses That Have No Receipt

Non-economic damages compensate for the human costs of an accident that no invoice can capture. They are real losses, often more devastating than the financial ones, but they require a different kind of proof. The most common forms of non-economic damages in Georgia include:

Pain and suffering. Physical pain from the injuries themselves and from the treatments required to recover, ongoing chronic pain, and the suffering caused by a long road through medical procedures.

Mental and emotional distress. Anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, sleep problems, and the emotional toll of living with limitations or disfigurement.

Loss of enjoyment of life. The activities, hobbies, and daily pleasures that the injury takes away, from playing sports with the kids to gardening to attending church or community events.

Disfigurement and scarring. Visible permanent injuries that affect appearance and self-image.

Loss of consortium. A claim brought by an injured person’s spouse for the impact of the injury on the marriage, including loss of companionship, affection, and intimacy. Loss of consortium claims have their own four-year statute of limitations under Georgia law.

Non-economic damages have no fixed formula in Georgia. Juries are given broad discretion to award what they believe is fair under all the circumstances, and skilled trial work makes a real difference in how these damages are presented and valued. The pain and suffering page in this resource library walks through the most common approaches.

No Cap on Most Damages

Unlike some states, Georgia does not impose a statutory cap on economic or non-economic damages in standard personal injury cases. In 2010, the Georgia Supreme Court struck down the prior cap on non-economic damages in medical malpractice cases in Atlanta Oculoplastic Surgery v. Nestlehutt, holding that the cap violated the Georgia Constitution’s right to a jury trial. The absence of caps means that catastrophic injury verdicts in Georgia can reach into the millions of dollars when the evidence supports it.

Punitive Damages: A Separate Category

In rare cases involving willful misconduct, fraud, malice, oppression, or reckless disregard for consequences, Georgia juries can award punitive damages on top of compensatory damages. Punitive damages are designed to punish the defendant and deter similar conduct, not to compensate the plaintiff. Under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1, punitive damages in most cases are capped at $250,000, but the cap does not apply to product liability cases or cases involving driving under the influence. Drunk driving cases involving a serious injury or fatality, including some Dunwoody personal injury cases, often support uncapped punitive awards.

Apportionment and Set-Offs

Even after a jury awards damages, the actual amount you collect can be reduced. Georgia’s modified comparative negligence rule, discussed in our comparative fault guide, reduces the award by your percentage of fault, and bars it entirely if you are 50% or more responsible. Health insurance liens, hospital liens, workers’ compensation liens, and Medicare or Medicaid reimbursement rights may also come out of the recovery.

Maximizing Damages Requires the Right Evidence

The size of a Georgia personal injury recovery depends on how well each category of damage is documented and presented. Request a free consultation, there is no fee unless we recover for you.

← Back to Personal Injury Resources

Schedule A Free Consultation

Becoming A New Client

Practice Areas

  • Car Accidents
  • Catastrophic Injury
  • Negligent Security
  • Premises Liability
  • Product Liability
  • Slip & Fall
  • Truck Accidents
  • Traumatic Brain Injury
  • Wrongful Death
  • Car Accidents
  • Catastrophic Injury
  • Negligent Security
  • Premises Liability
  • Product Liability
  • Slip & Fall
  • Truck Accidents
  • Traumatic Brain Injury
  • Wrongful Death

Client Reviews

Contact Us!

  • 5555 Glenridge Connector
    Suite 650 Atlanta, GA 30342
  • New Clients: 678.916.9387
Contact Us

Pursue Justice & Restore Your Quality of Life

Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys takes your personal injury personally.
5555 Glenridge Connector
Suite 650
Atlanta, GA 30342


New Clients:
678.916.9387
Existing Clients:
770.394.0047
Refer to Us
Menu
  • Home
  • About Us
  • FAQ
  • Personal Injury
  • Results
  • Blog
  • Request A Consultation
Policies
  • ADA Accessibility
  • Privacy Policy
Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Get the latest news and updates on Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys, Georgia law, and more

Linkedin

© 2026 Schneider Williamson |Sitemap

  • About Us
    • Meet Our Team
      • Jason Schneider
      • Campbell Williamson
      • Evelyn Graham
    • Our Values
    • Personal Injury FAQ
  • Personal Injury
    • Car Accidents
    • Dog Bite
    • Catastrophic Injuries
    • Industrial Accidents
    • Negligent Security
    • Premises Liabilities
    • Rideshare Accidents
    • Product Liabilities
    • Slip and Fall
    • Traumatic Brain Injuries
    • Truck Accidents
    • Wrongful Death
  • Results
    • Case Results
    • Testimonials
  • Blog
  • Referrals
    • Lawyers
    • Chiropractors
  • Request A Consultation
  • About Us
    • Meet Our Team
      • Jason Schneider
      • Campbell Williamson
      • Evelyn Graham
    • Our Values
    • Personal Injury FAQ
  • Personal Injury
    • Car Accidents
    • Dog Bite
    • Catastrophic Injuries
    • Industrial Accidents
    • Negligent Security
    • Premises Liabilities
    • Rideshare Accidents
    • Product Liabilities
    • Slip and Fall
    • Traumatic Brain Injuries
    • Truck Accidents
    • Wrongful Death
  • Results
    • Case Results
    • Testimonials
  • Blog
  • Referrals
    • Lawyers
    • Chiropractors
  • Request A Consultation