Answer FileInsurance
How much does a bad faith insurance lawyer cost in California?
Policyholder-side insurance cases are commonly handled on contingency — a negotiated percentage of the recovery, owed only if the case succeeds. Business and Professions Code section 6147 requires the agreement to be written, signed, and to state that the fee is negotiable, and Brandt fees can shift part of the cost to the insurer.
Most California policyholders do not pay hourly for a claim dispute. Bad faith and denied-claim cases are commonly taken on contingency, and Business and Professions Code section 6147 governs the paperwork: the agreement must be in writing, signed by attorney and client, state the percentage, explain how costs affect the recovery, and disclose that the fee is negotiable, not set by law. Ask whether the percentage is calculated before or after costs — experts are a real expense in these cases — and whether it steps up if the case goes to trial. One doctrine changes the economics in the policyholder's favor: under Brandt v. Superior Court (1985) 37 Cal.3d 813, attorney fees incurred to obtain the policy benefits themselves are recoverable as damages when the insurer withheld benefits in bad faith. Hourly and flat-fee arrangements appear mostly in commercial coverage reviews and smaller disputes. Consultations in this field are commonly free because the attorney is evaluating a case the firm may fund itself.
Authority: Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 6147
Legal information, not legal advice.
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