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✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231
A Compromise and Release pays a single lump sum that closes everything, past, future, and medical care. A Stipulation pays permanent disability in weekly installments and keeps future medical treatment open on the accepted body parts. Both require WCAB judge approval, and the right structure depends on injury type and cash needs. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) walks every client through the trade-off.
A C&R pays a lump sum that closes out the entire claim, including future medical care. A Stip pays permanent disability in weekly installments and typically leaves future medical open on the body parts covered by the claim. The C&R under §5001 is appropriate when the worker wants finality and a single payment; the Stip under §5100 is appropriate when the worker needs ongoing treatment and has a serious permanent condition. Choosing wrong costs real money, a worker with a serious spine condition who takes a C&R that cuts off future medical may face surgery costs that dwarf the lump sum.
This guide explains both settlement structures, how each one works, and how a specialist decides which structure fits the case facts. Eman Yazdchi, a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California, handles settlement structure decisions from Palmdale.
At a glance: A Compromise & Release closes the entire claim for a lump sum; Stipulations with Request for Award pays PD over time and keeps future medical open. The trade-offs are summarized below.
| Factor | Compromise & Release (C&R) | Stipulations with Request for Award |
|---|---|---|
| What it closes | Full release of all comp claims arising from the injury. | Stipulated PD rating; medical, reopener, and penalty rights preserved. |
| How worker gets paid | One lump sum 30–60 days after judge approval. | Biweekly PD checks under California Labor Code §4658 over the rating's weeks. |
| Future medical care (California Labor Code §4600) | Closed; projected lifetime cost included in the lump sum. | Open for life on the injured body parts. |
| SJDB voucher (California Labor Code §4658.7) | Typically negotiated into the lump sum. | Issued separately if PD is rated. |
| Reopening (California Labor Code §5410) | Waived as to the closed body parts. | Preserved 5 years from date of injury for new and further disability. |
| Penalty & back TD (California Labor Code §5814) | Negotiated into the lump sum; final. | Can be litigated separately on the record. |
| WCAB approval standard | Judge reviews adequacy; cannot reopen once final. | Judge confirms the stipulated rating matches the medical-legal record. |
| Strong fit when… | Injury stable, outside medical coverage available, lump sum has a use. | Future surgery or chronic care plausible, no reliable outside coverage. |
A lump-sum settlement that closes the entire case, past, future, and medical care, for a single payment approved by a WCAB judge.
A Compromise and Release under California Labor Code §5001 is a one-time, lump-sum settlement that closes the California workers' compensation case in full. The worker accepts a single payment in exchange for releasing every workers' comp claim against the employer and insurer, including permanent disability indemnity under California Labor Code §4660, future medical care under California Labor Code §4600, any Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit voucher under California Labor Code §4658.7, and any other unresolved claims arising out of the injury. After the C&R is approved by the WCAB judge, the case is over.
The C&R amount is negotiated between the worker's attorney and the insurer's defense counsel. The amount must reflect the present value of the future benefits being released, future medical care has a major impact on the valuation. A worker who needs continued treatment for a chronic injury may receive substantial value in the C&R for closing the future-medical piece, but the trade-off is permanent: once closed, future medical does not re-open absent extraordinary circumstances.
A settlement that pays permanent disability in weekly installments and keeps future medical treatment open on the accepted body parts.
A Stipulation with Request for Award under California Labor Code §5003 is a settlement structure that resolves the disputed permanent disability rating but keeps the case open. The parties stipulate to a specific permanent disability percentage and rating, which determines the permanent disability indemnity payable over time under the schedule in California Labor Code §4658. The award is paid weekly or biweekly until the indemnity is exhausted. Future medical care under California Labor Code §4600 stays open for the life of the worker for the body parts covered by the injury.
The Stip is a structured payment, not a lump sum. The permanent disability indemnity is paid over months or years depending on the rating. Future medical care continues, the worker keeps the right to treatment for the work injury indefinitely, subject to Utilization Review under California Labor Code §4610 and Independent Medical Review under California Labor Code §4610.5. The worker also keeps the right under California Labor Code §5410 to petition to reopen the case within five years of the date of injury for new and further disability.
C&R for cases with limited future medical exposure or cash needs; Stip for serious injuries where ongoing treatment and reopening rights matter more.
The right structure depends on the case profile. A C&R generally makes sense when the worker wants certainty and finality, when the future medical needs are limited or already addressed, when the worker wants to access a lump sum for major life expenses (paying off debt, buying a house, starting a business, paying for education), or when the worker has lost confidence in dealing with the insurer's UR and IMR processes for future treatment.
A Stip generally makes sense when the worker has chronic conditions requiring continued medical care, when the worker wants the option to reopen under California Labor Code §5410 if the condition worsens within five years, when the worker can manage on the structured weekly payments rather than needing a lump sum, or when the future medical care has substantial value the worker does not want to release.
Many California cases combine elements of both, for example, a C&R that explicitly preserves a Medicare Set-Aside for future Medicare-covered medical needs, or a Stip with a partial C&R on specific issues. A specialist attorney structures the settlement to match the worker's specific medical and financial situation.
When the worker is a Medicare beneficiary or close to it, a Medicare Set-Aside may be required to protect the right to future Medicare-covered care.
If the injured worker is a Medicare beneficiary or is expected to become one within 30 months, the C&R must include a Medicare Set-Aside arrangement that protects Medicare's interest. The MSA holds a portion of the C&R funds specifically for Medicare-covered future medical care related to the injury. The CMS (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services) reviews larger MSAs in advance. A C&R structured without proper MSA consideration can create Medicare liability for the worker years later. This is one of the technical reasons many California workers' comp cases settle as Stips with future medical preserved rather than C&Rs, the MSA mechanics are avoided.
The judge reviews the settlement for adequacy, confirms the worker understands the terms, and either approves it on the record or orders changes.
Every California workers' compensation settlement, both C&R and Stip, must be reviewed and approved by a Workers' Compensation Appeals Board judge. Under California Labor Code §5001 (C&R) and California Labor Code §5003 (Stip), the judge evaluates whether the settlement is adequate, whether the worker understands the terms, whether the worker has been properly advised of the consequences (especially the closing of future medical in a C&R), and whether the settlement properly protects the worker. Inadequate settlements can be rejected.
The approval process typically involves the worker appearing at the WCAB for a brief hearing, in person or by video, where the judge asks questions to confirm the worker understands the settlement. The attorney is present to explain the terms. Under California Labor Code §5811, the worker is entitled to a qualified interpreter at the approval hearing, with the cost charged to the defendant. After approval, the settlement is binding.
A C&R or Stip is binding once approved; a Petition for Reconsideration within twenty days is the only path to revisit it, and the bar is high.
A signed and judicially-approved C&R is generally final and not unwound, absent narrow grounds like fraud or mutual mistake. The reason California requires WCAB judicial approval is precisely to prevent buyer's remorse, the judge is checking that the worker understands the deal before approval. A Stip with Request for Award is more flexible because the case stays open: the worker can petition under California Labor Code §5410 within five years to reopen for new and further disability. An adverse Findings and Award on a settlement-approval issue can be challenged by a Petition for Reconsideration within 25 days of service by mail (or 20 days from electronic service) under California Labor Code §5903.
Related on yazdchilaw.com: California workers' comp settlement pillar · What happens at a mandatory settlement conference in california workers comp · Cr vs stipulated award workers comp · What is c and r settlement vs stipulated award · California Labor Code §4061.1 explained.
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Tap to call →The right settlement structure depends on injury type, future medical exposure, and cash flow needs; a specialist walks every client through both options.
The settlement-structure decision is the moment the case becomes real money. A poorly-structured settlement leaves money on the table or closes valuable rights the worker actually needs. A well-structured settlement delivers the right combination of cash, future medical, and finality for the worker's specific situation.
A C&R closes future medical care under California Labor Code §4600, for the life of the worker. For a worker with a chronic injury, that is a major right to release. The lump-sum value must reflect that future medical exposure. A worker who signs a C&R without understanding the future-medical closing risks years of out-of-pocket medical costs for the work injury. A specialist attorney quantifies the future-medical value before negotiating.
A Stipulation with Request for Award under California Labor Code §5003 keeps the case open. Future medical continues. The worker can petition to reopen within five years under California Labor Code §5410 for new and further disability, meaning if the condition worsens within the five-year window, the worker can return for additional indemnity or treatment. The five-year reopener is a substantial right that a C&R closes.
California workers' compensation attorneys work on contingency under California Labor Code §4906, typically 15% of any settlement, paid only if the case recovers. A free consultation costs nothing, and a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California, can evaluate the settlement offer, the future-medical value, and the C&R-vs-Stip trade-off before anything gets signed. Yazdchi Law handles California workers' compensation settlements from the firm's office in Palmdale.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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