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How is Post-Settlement Funding Different from Pre-Settlement Funding?

When a plaintiff or attorney secures a case, there is often a delay before the funds are disbursed. That’s where post-settlement funding comes in. But how does it differ from pre-settlement funding? Understanding the distinctions is key if you’re evaluating financing options in litigation. Balanced Bridge helps bridge the gap between settlement and your award.

What Is Pre-Settlement Funding?

Pre-settlement funding (sometimes called litigation advances or lawsuit advances) provides cash to a plaintiff during an active lawsuit—before the case is resolved. The funder assesses the strength of the case and advances an amount against the expected settlement or judgment. Notably:

  • It is typically non-recourse, meaning if the plaintiff loses, they owe nothing.
  • Approval is based on the merits of the case—not on credit score, employment history, or collateral.
  • The repayment is made from the eventual settlement proceeds, plus fees or interest.
  • It helps plaintiffs manage living costs, medical bills, or financial pressure while their case is pending.

Pre-settlement funding is often used when plaintiffs cannot wait the many months or years it may take for litigation to conclude.

Pre-settlement funding for attorneys on a single case is typically difficult to come by. There are legal funding firms that offer a variety of attorney funding on pending cases, but usually more in the form of lines of credit on a portfolio of cases.

What Is Post-Settlement Funding in Pennsylvania?

Post-settlement funding comes into play after a settlement has been reached, but before the funds are fully disbursed to the parties. At that point, plaintiffs or attorneys can sell a portion of the future payout or attorney fee to a funder such as Balanced Bridge Funding to receive liquidity immediately.

Key distinctions include:

  • Because the case is already resolved, the risk is lower than with pre-settlement funding and costs are cheaper.
  • The funder purchases future proceeds rather than assuming litigation risk.
  • Delays in distribution due to administrative or disbursement hold-ups are common, so this advance bridges the gap.
  • It is available to both plaintiffs and attorneys (i.e. advances on contingency fees) once settlement is reached but not necessarily, final.

Key Differences at a Glance

FeaturePre-Settlement FundingPost-Settlement Funding
TimingBefore final resolutionAfter settlement but before payout
RiskHigher, since case outcome uncertainLower risk, case already resolved
QualificationBased on merits and expected valueBased on enforceable settlement
Purpose Bridge during litigationBridge distribution delays, immediate liquidity
RepaymentRepayment From settlement
(if won)
From the disbursed settlement proceeds

Why Post-Settlement Funding Matters in Pennsylvania

Even after a successful outcome, plaintiffs and attorneys can’t always wait weeks or months for funds. Delays in administrative processing, court approvals, or escrow clearance are common. Post-settlement funding ensures you don’t remain cash-strapped while waiting.

If you or your firm have a settled case but are still waiting for distribution, Balanced Bridge Funding can offer customized, non-recourse advances to convert that future payout into present cash flow.

Talk to one of our legal funding specialists about post settlement funding for attorneys, please call 267-457-4540 or email info@balancedbridge.com.

Ready to turn your delayed settlement into working capital today? Fill our quick application form and explore your post-settlement funding options, let us help you access your funds when you need them, and help bridge the gap between fee payments.

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