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QLD Compensation Payout Amounts (2026 Update)

(Last updated: 9 June 2026)

Payouts for personal injury claims are generally kept confidential and are usually only public knowledge if a judge determines the appropriate amount. In Queensland, the largest personal injury claim is around $20 million dollars for a heart-breaking and serious brain injury where the claimant required constant care and assistance for the remainder of his life.

So personal injury claim payouts (or judgement awards, if the matter goes to trial) in Queensland can range anywhere from $0 – $20 million. Where you fall on the scale depends primarily on the nature and severity of the injury, and the difference between your earning potential prior to the injury and your future reduced earning capacity post-injury.

This page publishes statistics of the average compensation sums paid on account of personal injury claims and is updated annually. Alternatively, you can read our:

If you are thinking about making a claim for personal injuries, consider using our online compensation calculator or get a free claim check with a lawyer at Roche Legal to get an idea of what you may be owed.

Average Payouts for Queensland Motor Vehicle Accident Injury Claims

Historically, in Queensland, for motor vehicle accidents, there are around 7,000 CTP claims for personal injury every year and more than half of these are in Brisbane.

A total of somewhere around $650,000,000 is paid out to claimants each year which suggests the average payout for a motor vehicle accident personal injury claim may be around $92,857.

However, the calculation isn’t that simple. Considering the vast majority (over 70%) of personal injury claims are for minor injuries, and around 15% are claims for injuries that are moderate in severity, the average injury claim payouts would obviously be much higher the more severe the injury is.

The chart below shows average CTP claim payouts and the number of claims for motor vehicle accidents in Queensland per year, broken down by injury severity.

The data is sourced from the Compulsory Third Party (CTP) Personal Injury Register, maintained by the Motor Accident Insurance Commission (MAIC), and published by the Queensland Government. The figures reflect all finalised claims recorded as at the most recent reporting period.

Average Queensland Public Liability Injury Claim Payouts

There are no regular or readily published statistics for public liability claim payouts in Queensland. However, the principles that underpin claims for personal injuries made under public liability insurance (such as slips, trips, and falls) are generally the same as damages claims for personal injuries made under other legislation.

One could infer from published statistics about workplace injuries and motor vehicle injuries that most payouts for public liability injuries range from around $80,000 to $350,000, and higher for more severe injuries.

Litigated outcomes give a sharper picture. Roche Legal’s quantum database currently records median damages of $284,722 across 4 Queensland PIPA Public Liability judgments in which the plaintiff recovered damages – see the filtered view.

Because damages for public liabilty claims are regulated by the Civil Liability Act 2003, which also regulates CTP claims made under the Motor Accident Insurance Act 1994, the damages are closely aligned.

Average Queensland Workplace Accident Injury Claim Payouts

In Queensland, there are around 3,000 common law claims for workplace injuries each year. For workplace accidents, despite us being in the year 2026, the latest data published by Workcover Queensland remains for the 2023-24 financial year.

The data suggests that the average common law payout for damages relating to a work injury is approximately $187,656.
Source

If a common law claim is not made, compensation is paid on a lump sum basis, determined by legislation and the degree of permanent impairment as assessed by an independent specialist doctor.

What do the courts award?

The figures above come from insurance company data on claims that settle. But not every claim settles. Some proceed to a contested hearing, where a judge assesses damages. Those court judgments tell a different part of the story.

We maintain a database of Queensland personal injury judgments, extracting the damages actually awarded across motor accident, workplace, public liability and medical negligence claims.

Across the litigated matters where a plaintiff was awarded damages, the median award looks like this:

Median Queensland personal injury damages

$327,278
Across 60 substantive Queensland personal injury damages judgments from 2021 to 2026 where the plaintiff recovered damages
$0$6M
Based on litigated court judgments only — settlements, which resolve the majority of claims, are not included. Each dot above is one case; the shaded band marks the middle 50% (Q1–Q3) and the tick shows the median. Right-skew is expected — a small number of catastrophic-injury cases sit far to the right, which is why the median (not mean) is reported. Hover or click any dot for details.
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On a claim-type basis, court awards are:

Median Queensland personal injury damages by claim type

PIPA Medical Negligence (n=2)
$3,042,729 (median)
$0$6M
Hybrid (WCRA + PIPA) (n=6)
$800,074 (median)
$0$6M
WCRA Common Law (n=19)
$482,697 (median)
$0$6M
PIPA Public Liability (n=3)
$465,702 (median)
$0$6M
Other (n=3)
$369,433 (median)
$0$6M
MAIA (n=27)
$148,826 (median)
$0$6M
Each dot is one case; the shaded band marks the middle 50% (Q1–Q3) and the tick marks the median. Hover any dot for the case name and recovery; click to investigate. Claim types with fewer than 2 quantum cases are suppressed. Based on Queensland personal injury court judgments from 2021 to 2026. Settlements are not included.
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About the Author

Sean J. Roche
Director, Roche Legal

Sean is the Director of Roche Legal and leads the firm’s Springwood office. He holds a Bachelor of Laws from the Queensland University of Technology and a Bachelor of Business Management from the University of Queensland. Sean is admitted to practice in the Supreme Court of Queensland and the High Court of Australia, and is a member of the Queensland Law Society.

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This commentary is published by Roche Legal for general information purposes only and should not be relied on as specific advice. The content relates to Queensland law only and is subject to change over time. You should seek legal advice for any question, or for any specific situation or proposal, before making any decision.