Car Accident Medical Costs in New Hampshire
New Hampshire is an at-fault (tort) state. PIP insurance is not required. Minimum bodily injury limits are $25K / $50K.
At-Fault (Tort) System in New Hampshire
New Hampshire is an at-fault (tort) state. This means the driver who caused the accident is responsible for paying the other party's medical bills and damages through their bodily injury (BI) liability insurance. Injured parties can sue for full damages including pain and suffering without restrictions.
How medical bills get paid in New Hampshire:
- MedPay pays first (if you carry it) — no fault needed
- Health insurance covers remaining bills (with subrogation rights)
- Attorney may issue Letter of Protection for ongoing treatment
- At-fault driver's BI insurance pays through settlement ($25K / $50K minimum)
- UM/UIM coverage fills gaps if carried (optional in New Hampshire)
New Hampshire Auto Insurance Requirements
| Bodily Injury (per person) | $25,000 |
| Bodily Injury (per accident) | $50,000 |
| Property Damage | $25,000 |
| PIP Required? | No |
| UM/UIM Required? | No |
| MedPay Required? | No (optional) |
| Average Annual Premium | $1,560/year ($130/month) |
| Uninsured Motorist Rate | 7.6% (national avg: 15.4%) |
Note: Only state where auto insurance is not legally required (financial responsibility rules apply)
After a Car Accident in New Hampshire
1. Seek medical attention immediately
Even if injuries seem minor, get evaluated. Many car accident injuries (whiplash, concussions, internal bleeding) have delayed symptoms. An ER visit (CPT 99285) averages $608 at Medicare rates but may cost $1,500-$3,000+ through commercial insurance.
2. File insurance claims
In New Hampshire, you may file a MedPay claim with your own insurer (if you carry it), and file a BI claim against the at-fault driver's insurance.
3. Document everything
Keep all medical bills, records, and correspondence. Medical costs are the foundation of your injury claim. Use our cost estimator to verify if your bills are reasonable.
4. Consider legal representation
An attorney can help negotiate medical liens (often reducing them 30-50%), handle insurance negotiations, and ensure you receive full compensation. Average settlements are 4.4x higher with attorney representation.
Medical Procedure Costs in New Hampshire
Medical costs in New Hampshire are adjusted by CMS Geographic Practice Cost Indices (GPCI). View Medicare and estimated commercial rates for common car accident procedures in New Hampshire.
View New Hampshire Medical Procedure Costs →New Hampshire Insurance Department
For official information about auto insurance requirements and consumer complaints in New Hampshire:
New Hampshire Insurance Dept.