If both liability and damages are in dispute, expect a longer trial for your personal injury case. In Ontario, that usually means 3–5 weeks in court with multiple experts and witnesses. The trial itself is long—but the years of prep are what really shape the outcome.
Most people don’t realize this: You can be found “not at fault” for an accident… …and still have your treatment denied by your own insurer. Fault ≠ entitlement to benefits. Two different systems (AB & Tort). Two different fights.
Income Replacement Benefits (IRBs) in Ontario are capped (typically 70% of gross income, up to a maximum of $400/week). If your income exceeds that, the shortfall may be part of your tort/lawsuit claim later.
A personal injury case can be strong and still take years to complete. Time isn’t a sign of weakness—it’s how these cases are built from the ground up!
Reminder: You don’t have to “look injured” to have a valid personal injury claim. Some of the most serious injuries after a car accident aren’t visible.
You don’t need to go to trial to have a strong personal injury case. In fact, most strong car accident cases never see a courtroom (95% of them settle).
Daniel Badre
You don’t need to pay a lawyer upfront to pursue a personal injury claim after a car accident.
Contingency fees exist because most injured people can’t afford hourly billing—especially when they’re off work as a result of the accident.
1 hour ago | [YT] | 0
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Daniel Badre
For car accident personal injury cases The goal isn’t just to prove you were injured.
It’s to prove how your life changed—and that it’s not going back to what it was.
1 day ago | [YT] | 0
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Daniel Badre
If both liability and damages are in dispute, expect a longer trial for your personal injury case.
In Ontario, that usually means 3–5 weeks in court with multiple experts and witnesses.
The trial itself is long—but the years of prep are what really shape the outcome.
2 days ago | [YT] | 0
View 0 replies
Daniel Badre
Most people don’t realize this:
You can be found “not at fault” for an accident…
…and still have your treatment denied by your own insurer.
Fault ≠ entitlement to benefits.
Two different systems (AB & Tort). Two different fights.
3 days ago | [YT] | 0
View 0 replies
Daniel Badre
Income Replacement Benefits (IRBs) in Ontario are capped (typically 70% of gross income, up to a maximum of $400/week).
If your income exceeds that, the shortfall may be part of your tort/lawsuit claim later.
4 days ago | [YT] | 0
View 0 replies
Daniel Badre
Preparation for an Examination for Discovery can shape your entire case.
Review your medical history, timelines, and prior statements. Be honest, consistent, and don’t guess. If you don’t know or remember, say so.
It’s not about perfection—it’s about credibility.
5 days ago | [YT] | 0
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Daniel Badre
A personal injury case can be strong and still take years to complete. Time isn’t a sign of weakness—it’s how these cases are built from the ground up!
6 days ago | [YT] | 0
View 0 replies
Daniel Badre
Reminder: You don’t have to “look injured” to have a valid personal injury claim.
Some of the most serious injuries after a car accident aren’t visible.
1 week ago | [YT] | 0
View 0 replies
Daniel Badre
Two people can have the same injury diagnoses on paper—
and have completely different outcomes in their personal injury case.
The Impact/impairments on your life matter more than your diagnoses on paper!
1 week ago | [YT] | 1
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Daniel Badre
You don’t need to go to trial to have a strong personal injury case.
In fact, most strong car accident cases never see a courtroom (95% of them settle).
1 week ago | [YT] | 0
View 0 replies
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