Personal injury patients represent one of the most financially rewarding — and most misunderstood — niches in chiropractic practice. Done right, PI cases generate consistent revenue, strengthen your documentation skills, and build deep relationships with attorneys who send patients for years. Done wrong, they create billing headaches, documentation gaps, and strained attorney relationships that dry up your referrals overnight.
This guide breaks down exactly how to build and grow a PI practice by becoming the chiropractor that personal injury attorneys want to refer to.
Before you can attract attorney referrals, you need to understand what makes PI chiropractic fundamentally different from standard insurance or cash-pay practice:
The payer is a settlement, not insurance. Most PI patients are treated on a Letter of Protection (LOP) — the attorney guarantees your fees will be paid from the settlement proceeds. You don’t bill health insurance for these visits.
Documentation drives case value. Every note you write can end up in front of an insurance adjuster, opposing counsel, or a jury. The quality of your documentation directly affects how much the attorney can recover for your patient — which directly affects how long they keep sending you referrals.
The attorney is your business partner, not just a referral source. They have a fiduciary duty to their client. If your documentation is weak or your billing is inflated, it damages their case. If your notes are thorough, timely, and clear, you make them look good. That’s the dynamic you want.
Most chiropractors who try to build attorney relationships focus on the wrong things — fancy offices, expensive lunches, golf outings. Experienced PI attorneys care about exactly three things:
When an attorney sends you a patient, they need to be able to build a demand letter around your notes. That means:
If your documentation is vague, templated, or missing objective findings, experienced PI attorneys will stop referring to you quickly.
Attorneys manage dozens of open cases. When they need an update on a patient — appointment compliance, current pain levels, whether the patient is approaching MMI — they need a fast, accurate answer. The clinics that build lasting attorney relationships are the ones that respond within the same business day, every time.
Inflated bills are a red flag for adjusters and can torpedo a settlement. Attorneys need to know your billing is defensible — that your charges are consistent with the local market and your CPT codes match the care you documented.
Don’t pursue attorney relationships until your documentation can withstand scrutiny. This means:
If you’re unsure whether your notes are PI-ready, ask a PI attorney to review a sample chart. Most will give you honest feedback.
Before you accept your first PI patient on LOP, have a written process for:
Clinics that lack a clear LOP process end up with uncollected balances and frustrated attorneys. Clinics with a clean process get more referrals because the attorney knows the business side will be handled professionally.
Not every PI attorney is a good fit. You want to build relationships with attorneys who:
Start with 10–15 targeted attorneys rather than trying to blanket the market. A deep relationship with five attorneys who each send you 3–5 cases per month is worth more than shallow relationships with 50.
Cold calls and unsolicited lunches are largely ineffective. The best introductions happen through:
When you receive your first referral from an attorney, treat it as an audition. This means:
If you do this well on the first case, you will get more cases. If you drop the ball on communication or documentation, you won’t get a second chance.
Once you start receiving consistent PI referrals, the volume can grow quickly. Clinics that scale PI well have systems for:
Referral intake: A standardized process for accepting a new PI patient, obtaining the LOP, gathering accident details, and scheduling the initial visit — all within 24 hours of the attorney contact.
Documentation workflow: A template system that ensures every PI patient’s notes meet attorney-quality standards, without requiring double the time of standard notes.
Progress report delivery: A scheduled system for delivering reports to the attorney at 30, 60, and 90 days — automatically, without waiting for a request.
LOP and billing tracking: A clear ledger of outstanding LOPs by case, with escalation triggers when a settlement is delayed.
Over-treating: Adjusters and opposing counsel look for patterns of excessive treatment. Document your clinical rationale for every visit frequency decision.
Inconsistent communication: Missing a call from an attorney’s office or failing to deliver a progress report on time signals that you’re not a reliable partner.
Bill inflation: Charging significantly above market rates for PI cases creates settlement disputes that hurt your attorney partner and rarely benefits your patient.
Treating PI patients like regular patients: They need faster scheduling, better communication, and more detailed documentation. If you apply your general practice workflow to PI cases, the results will disappoint everyone.
Failing to build the causation narrative: Your intake documentation must establish that the injury is related to the accident. “Patient presents with back pain” is not the same as “Patient presents with lower back pain following motor vehicle accident on [date], when patient was a restrained driver struck from behind at highway speed.”
A well-run chiropractic PI practice typically achieves:
The practices that reach this level share one characteristic: they treat the attorney relationship as a genuine business partnership, not just a patient source.
When your clinic is known as the one that makes attorneys’ jobs easier, the referrals become self-sustaining.
AttorneyChiro connects chiropractors with personal injury attorneys through a platform that automates referrals, documentation, and LOP billing. Request a demo to see how clinics in our network are growing their PI revenue.
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