If you’ve been injured at work in California and your case is heading toward resolution, you will likely face one of the most important decisions in the entire process: should you settle your case through a Stipulated Award (Stips) or a Compromise and Release (C&R)? Each has significant advantages and drawbacks depending on your circumstances. As a board-certified workers’ comp specialist, attorney Eman Yazdchi helps injured workers understand these options every day.
Overview: Two Ways to Resolve Your Case
Both Stipulated Awards and Compromise & Release settlements are approved by a Workers’ Compensation Administrative Law Judge (WCALJ) at the WCAB. Both result in a permanent disability (PD) benefit for the injured worker. But how those benefits are paid, and what rights you keep or give up, differ dramatically.
What Is a Stipulated Award?
A Stipulated Award — commonly called “Stips” — is an agreement between you and the insurance company on the key facts of your case: the body parts injured, the percentage of permanent disability, your average weekly earnings, and the period of disability. Based on these stipulated facts, the judge issues an award ordering the insurer to pay your permanent disability benefits.
How Payment Works with Stips
PD benefits under a Stipulated Award are paid biweekly over the life of the award. The weekly rate depends on your PD percentage, your date of injury, and the statutory rate in effect. For example, a worker with a 35% PD rating might receive biweekly payments for several years until the total award amount is paid out.
Medical Treatment Stays Open
This is the critical difference. Under a Stipulated Award, your right to future medical treatment remains open. The insurance company must continue to provide all reasonable and necessary medical care for the injured body parts — potentially for life. This includes doctor visits, physical therapy, surgery, medications, and durable medical equipment.
For workers with conditions that may require ongoing care (like spinal injuries that might need future surgery), keeping medical treatment open can be worth far more than the PD payments themselves.
Other Rights Preserved
- Right to Petition to Reopen: If your condition worsens within five years of the injury date, you can petition to reopen the case for additional benefits (Labor Code section 5410).
- Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit (SJDB): If applicable, you retain eligibility for retraining vouchers.
What Is a Compromise and Release?
A Compromise & Release — or C&R — is a full and final settlement of your case. You receive a lump-sum payment in exchange for closing out most or all of your rights to future benefits. The parties agree on a total dollar amount that accounts for permanent disability, future medical treatment value, and any other outstanding issues.
How Payment Works with C&R
You receive the entire settlement amount in a single lump-sum check (minus your attorney’s fee and any outstanding liens). There are no biweekly payments to wait for. You receive your money quickly after the judge approves the settlement.
Medical Treatment Is Closed
In most C&R settlements, future medical treatment is closed. The insurance company will no longer pay for medical care related to the injury. The settlement amount is supposed to include a “buy-out” of your future medical needs, but in practice, predicting future medical costs is difficult — especially for injuries that may require surgery years down the road.
Some C&R settlements include a “Medicare Set-Aside” (MSA), which is a separate fund earmarked for future medical treatment to protect Medicare’s interests. This is required in cases where the injured worker is a Medicare beneficiary or reasonably expected to become one within 30 months.
Rights Given Up
- No right to petition to reopen the case for worsening condition
- No ongoing medical treatment (unless specifically carved out)
- No future temporary disability or supplemental benefits
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Stipulated Award | Compromise & Release |
|---|---|---|
| Payment | Biweekly over time | Lump sum |
| Future Medical | Open (insurer pays) | Closed (you pay out of settlement) |
| Right to Reopen | Yes (within 5 years) | No |
| Finality | Case partially open | Case fully closed |
| Speed of Payment | Slower (payments over months/years) | Faster (single check) |
| Best For | Ongoing medical needs | Financial flexibility / clean break |
When to Choose a Stipulated Award
A Stipulated Award is generally the better choice when:
- You have ongoing medical needs— If you need continuing treatment, medications, or may need future surgery, keeping medical open protects you from paying out of pocket.
- Your condition may worsen— The right to reopen within five years is valuable insurance against deterioration.
- You have Medicare concerns— If you are on Medicare or approaching eligibility, a Stips avoids the complex Medicare Set-Aside requirements.
- You don’t need immediate cash— If you can afford to receive payments over time, you often preserve more total value.
When to Choose a Compromise & Release
A C&R may be the better choice when:
- You want a clean break— No more dealing with the insurance company, no more utilization review, no more treatment authorization battles.
- Your medical condition is stable— If you don’t anticipate needing significant future medical treatment, giving up medical may be acceptable.
- You need a lump sum— To pay off debt, fund a career change, or make a major purchase, a lump sum provides financial flexibility.
- The buy-out amount is favorable— If the insurer offers a generous settlement that adequately accounts for future medical costs, the lump sum may exceed the present value of the alternative Stips award.
- You have health insurance— If you have private health coverage or will have employer-sponsored insurance, the loss of workers’ comp medical may be less impactful.
How Your Attorney Negotiates the Best Outcome
Choosing between Stips and C&R is not a decision you should make alone. A workers’ comp settlement attorney analyzes multiple factors to recommend the best path:
- The PD rating and its dollar value
- The projected cost of future medical treatment
- Your age, employment status, and health insurance coverage
- Whether the insurer is likely to obstruct future medical treatment
- Medicare eligibility and MSA requirements
- Whether there are subrogation liens or outstanding medical liens
At Yazdchi Law P.C., we model both scenarios for our clients and provide a clear recommendation based on the numbers — not pressure to close the case quickly. If you have questions about how to settle your workers’ comp case, contact us for a free consultation.