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Misdiagnosis Compensation Claims
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Free initial advice
If you've been hurt, our trusted solicitors can help
No upfront fees. No obligation. A specialist will review your enquiry and come back to you.
Trusted by injured people across the UK
A misdiagnosis claim is a type of medical negligence claim that may arise when a healthcare professional provides substandard care that leads to a medical condition being missed, causing preventable harm. Misdiagnosis compensation claims can involve a doctor, GP, or other medical professional failing to recognise clear symptoms, misinterpreting test results, or diagnosing the wrong condition, causing your health to worsen or leading to unnecessary treatment. If your misdiagnosis claim is successful, compensation can cover your pain and suffering, lost earnings, care costs, and ongoing private treatment expenses. At Accident Claims, our medical negligence solicitors can assess your case today, and all misdiagnosis claims we take on are handled under No Win No Fee terms, meaning there are no upfront costs.
Misdiagnosis can affect your life in ways you never expected, and that’s why Accident Claims’ specialist solicitors are here to support you. When symptoms are overlooked, or a condition is diagnosed too late, you may be left coping with pain, uncertainty and treatment you were not prepared for. Everyday routines can become harder, work may be disrupted, and the emotional impact of feeling unheard can stay with you. If a wrong diagnosis, missed warning sign, or delayed referral has caused that disruption, we will assess whether medical negligence played a part.
With decades of experience, over £100 million secured in compensation, and a team experienced in investigating complex medical negligence cases, we understand that your situation is about more than what appears in your patient notes. Our solicitors gather the evidence needed to support your case, and we explain everything clearly from the first conversation. With No Win No Fee representation, the process stays straightforward and focused on your recovery and future.
Speak with us today about what happened:
Medical misdiagnosis occurs when a healthcare professional fails to identify a condition correctly or in time, whether by diagnosing the wrong illness, delaying a diagnosis or missing the condition altogether. This can happen in many clinical settings, including GP surgeries, hospital departments and community clinics.
Misdiagnosis is not automatically negligent, and part of our role is to assess whether the diagnostic decisions fell below an acceptable clinical standard. As symptoms often overlap and test results require precise interpretation, identifying where a diagnostic error occurred demands detailed clinical analysis. Reviewing available medical evidence, such as patient records and independent assessments from specialist clinical experts, will help evaluate whether a misdiagnosis occurred, whether it was negligent, and, if so, whether it caused avoidable suffering.
When you contact Accident Claims about a possible misdiagnosis claim, you do not need to provide organised files, expert reports or medical records. Our solicitors will request your hospital records and GP notes on your behalf. A single conversation could help you understand whether our team can investigate your wrong diagnosis. Reach out today and take your first step towards making a medical misdiagnosis compensation claim.
Misdiagnosis occurs when a healthcare professional diagnoses the wrong condition, while a delayed diagnosis happens when the correct diagnosis is made later than it reasonably should have been. A missed diagnosis means a medical condition was not identified at all.
Our solicitors draw on their experience with misdiagnosis compensation claims when reviewing your clinical history to determine which specific diagnostic failure best reflects what happened to you:
Unsure about the different types of medical misdiagnosis and how they fit your situation? Tell us what happened, and our solicitors will begin investigating where the diagnostic process may have gone wrong.
Yes, you can claim compensation for a medical misdiagnosis if a healthcare professional provided substandard care and caused you avoidable harm. Our team of expert misdiagnosis solicitors assess this by reviewing the symptoms you reported, the tests or referrals that were considered, and how the delay or error affected your health.
To understand whether your misdiagnosis compensation claim has valid grounds to proceed, we need to help you establish that your case meets the following eligibility criteria:
Doctors, nurses, and other clinicians must provide the correct standard of care when assessing symptoms, arranging tests, making referrals or diagnosing a condition. This duty means they must act in line with what a competent medical professional would do in the same situation. We verify the timeline of your care to confirm which healthcare provider was responsible for your diagnostic pathway.
A failure in care occurs when a healthcare provider acts in a way that a responsible professional in the same field would not. In a misdiagnosis claim, we examine the clinical decisions made at each stage to identify whether symptoms were dismissed, test results for blood clots were overlooked, or a referral to a specialist should have been made sooner.
Our solicitors will next establish how the negligent treatment or care directly caused you unnecessary harm. This may include a fracture worsening because it was misidentified as a soft‑tissue injury or an infection spreading after being mistaken for a minor illness. You may also be able to claim for any psychological distress you experience as a result of the failure in care.
As part of the claims process, we arrange for an independent medical expert to review your symptoms and provide an objective assessment of the long‑term impact of the misdiagnosis.
Yes, you can claim for misdiagnosis against the NHS or a private healthcare provider if the care you received resulted in avoidable harm. Claims involving public healthcare are handled by NHS Resolution, the body that manages clinical negligence cases on behalf of NHS trusts and contracted GP surgeries. If your diagnostic error occurred in a private hospital or clinic, we’ll guide you through the process of claiming against the organisation’s insurer or the independent practitioner responsible for your treatment.
Yes, you can make a misdiagnosis claim on behalf of a loved one if they cannot pursue compensation themselves because they are under 18 or lack the mental capacity to manage the process. In these situations, you may be able to act as their litigation friend.
As a litigation friend, you would make decisions about the claim on their behalf and help protect their best interests throughout the process. Accident Claims will explain the role in plain terms, outline what to expect, and help you gather the medical records needed to show how the misdiagnosis has affected your loved one’s life.
You do not need to work out these medical or legal questions alone. Speak with our solicitors at Accident Claims to find out how we can review your treatment records, check your eligibility and guide you through the misdiagnosis compensation claims process.
After confirming that you have a valid medical negligence claim, our solicitors can help you by guiding you through what went wrong, gathering supportive evidence, and presenting the case on your behalf. From your first conversation, Accident Claims focuses on making the legal process as straightforward and manageable as possible by:
Get in touch today to learn how our solicitors can support you throughout your misdiagnosis claim, from reviewing your care history to gathering the evidence needed to move your case forward.
An NHS trust, private hospital group, or independent GP surgery could be legally responsible when a misdiagnosis occurs and substandard care causes avoidable harm. Identifying the correct party is not always straightforward, particularly if your treatment involved multiple appointments, changing departments, or delayed referrals.
If your care was passed between different healthcare teams, you do not have to untangle the administrative details on your own. Speak with our solicitors at Accident Claims today to find out how we can review your logs and identify the provider responsible.
A misdiagnosis is only considered medical negligence if the diagnostic care falls below acceptable professional standards and leaves you with avoidable physical or psychological harm. Some medical symptoms overlap, and certain complex illnesses develop gradually, meaning an incorrect diagnosis or an unexpected outcome alone does not automatically prove substandard care.
When Accident Claims reviews your case, our team looks for clear signs that the diagnostic process should have been handled differently, such as:
You present with sudden headaches, blurred vision and vomiting, but these symptoms are treated as migraines, and no scans are arranged. With the brain tumour left undiagnosed, rising pressure inside the skull causes a loss of vision in your left eye and new problems with coordination and balance.
If something similar has happened to you, contact our team today so we can assess your situation and explain whether you may have grounds for a misdiagnosis compensation claim.
Cancer, brain injuries, infections, and fractures are among the most commonly misdiagnosed conditions linked with compensation claims. Accident Claims will review your records, symptoms and treatment timeline to understand whether the diagnosis you received was reasonable, or whether clearer action should have been taken sooner:
Contact Accident Claims today if your diagnosis changed after your symptoms were missed or dismissed. Our solicitors will examine what was known by your healthcare team at the time and explain whether you have grounds to pursue a medical misdiagnosis claim.
A medical misdiagnosis can affect your health in several ways, including by worsening symptoms or causing unnecessary complications. The exact toll will depend on the condition involved, how long the error continued, and whether any incorrect treatments were given in the meantime.
Our medical negligence solicitors frequently see diagnostic failures lead to severe health consequences, including:
Speak with our solicitors about how the misdiagnosis affected your treatment, recovery and daily health, and we will explain whether we can help you pursue compensation.
If a negligent misdiagnosis led to wrongful death, it is possible for eligible dependants and the deceased’s estate to make a fatal medical negligence compensation claim. Under the Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1934, the deceased’s estate can bring a claim for the pain, suffering and financial losses experienced before their passing.
The estate is the only party that can pursue compensation in the first 6 months of your loved one’s death, and it can also make a dependency claim on behalf of eligible family members. If it does not do so within that timeframe, qualifying dependants can step forward to claim under the Fatal Accidents Act 1976 for how the death has affected them. You can read more about claiming in such difficult circumstances in our dedicated guide to fatal claims.
When a diagnosis was missed or delayed before a loved one died, it is entirely natural to want clear explanations before thinking about legal action. Our team at Accident Claims is here to help your family understand exactly what your options are and support you through every stage of the process.
Following a successful outcome, how much compensation you can claim for misdiagnosis will depend on the severity of the avoidable harm, the impact on your daily life, and the related financial losses. Compensation for medical negligence can include 2 parts, and our solicitors will consider both when valuing the impact of the diagnostic error:
Our solicitors often use the Judicial College Guidelines (JCG) when valuing general damages. The JCG is a document that outlines guideline brackets for different types and severities of harm.
The figures in the table below are not a guarantee of compensation, and the amount you might receive will depend on the specifics of your case. Please also note that the top entry is not from the JCG.
| Harm & Severity | Compensation | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Multiple Forms of Very Severe Harm + Out-of-Pocket Costs | Up to £1 million or above | Multiple instances of severe harm, together with financial losses for counselling, private medical care, and lost earnings. |
| Brain - (a) Very Severe | £372,570 to £533,720 | At higher end of bracket, full-time nursing care will be needed and there will be little to no indication of language function. |
| Kidney - (a) Serious Bilateral Damage or Loss | £223,800 to £277,980 | Loss or damage to both kidneys will be permanent. |
| Bowels - (b) Total Function Loss | Up to £198,320 | There will also be colostomy dependence, depending on age. |
| Chest - (a) Worst Type of Cases | £133,000 to £198,320 | Complete removal of a lung and/or serious heart damage alongside serious, prolonged pain and permanent significant scarring. |
| Male Reproductive System - (b) Complete Impotence, Sterility and Loss of Sexual Function in Young Person | £151,800 to £195,960 | Award depends on age, whether claimant has children, and pain or scarring. |
| Female Reproductive System - (b) Sexual Dysfunction | £56,820 to £134,900 | This dysfunction is likely permanent in someone with children or who would not have had any. |
| Bladder - (b) Complete Loss of Function | Up to £185,840 | In this bracket, claimant will also experience total loss of control. |
| Lung - (a) Serious Disability | £133,000 to £179,560 | Claimant is young and there is a probability of progressive worsening resulting in premature death. |
| Digestive System (Non-Traumatic) - (i) Severe Toxicosis | £50,770 to £69,360 | Resulting in serious acute pain, diarrhoea, and vomiting that requires hospital admission. |
Reach out to our solicitors with any questions about how your claim might be valued. We will explain clearly how Accident Claims evaluates the harm caused by a misdiagnosis and the financial effects it has had on your life.
Yes, misdiagnosis compensation claims can cover financial losses linked to the avoidable harm you experienced. These costs fall under special damages, and they can only be claimed if you have evidence such as receipts, invoices, payslips, or bank statements.
When assessing the immediate and long‑term financial impact of a misdiagnosis, our solicitors look at the full range of practical costs you have faced, including:
Please speak with your solicitor before paying privately for major medical treatments or specialist consultations that you hope to recover as part of your claim. We will look at your situation and explain how these costs are assessed before you spend money out of pocket.
Contact our team today to find out how Accident Claims can help you build a clear picture of your financial losses and guide you through the misdiagnosis compensation claims process.
The process for making misdiagnosis compensation claims involves getting medical care, preserving relevant evidence, and seeking specialist advice. Accident Claims will guide you through each stage of the legal journey, ensuring you are not left trying to gather records, evaluate evidence, or navigate the medical negligence process alone.
To establish a clear path forward for your case, we recommend focusing on these essential steps:
Your health is the priority, so it’s important that any concerns about your condition or treatment are discussed with the healthcare professionals responsible for your care. These appointments also create an important chronicle of your recovery, which our medical negligence solicitors will use to help understand how the diagnostic error affected your health.
While you do not need to build the legal case yourself, keeping appointment letters, test results, referral notes, and prescription details can be highly useful. Our team will request the medical records needed to assess the case and to understand which symptoms were reported and whether your test findings were acted on appropriately.
Misdiagnosis cases often involve multiple appointments across different clinics, so writing down the sequence of events while it is fresh helps our solicitors pinpoint where your care fell short. Noting down when your symptoms started, who you saw, and when the correct diagnosis was finally made provides a vital starting point to support the claim.
Keeping records of your worsening symptoms, pain levels, and mobility changes helps show the full extent of the preventable harm you have suffered. Our team will also use your receipts, payslips, and bank statements to value your financial losses, including lost income or the value of care provided by your loved ones.
Sharing your experience with our solicitors at an early stage allows us to assess your treatment timeline and explain the next steps to move a potential claim forward. Accident Claims will assess your unique circumstances, explain what evidence is required, and arrange an independent evaluation with a medical specialist to document the harm you experienced.
Most medical misdiagnosis claims need to be started within 3 years of the negligence or the date you became aware of it. There are exceptions to this, so it is important to get advice as soon as possible if you think you may have a claim. You can read more in our dedicated guide on limitation periods.
Start with the part you already know: what happened to your health. When you speak with our solicitors, they will review your treatment logs and help you take the first steps toward securing the answers you deserve.
Starting a medical misdiagnosis compensation claim can feel daunting when you are already navigating the effects of a wrong or delayed diagnosis. Accident Claims will make each step clear, explain how our solicitors would approach your case, and help you understand the support available before the claim begins.
At Accident Claims, our solicitors work on a fully No Win No Fee basis for medical misdiagnosis compensation claims nationwide. This is made possible by a Conditional Fee Agreement.
Before the process begins, our solicitors will explain the arrangement clearly and how no service fees will apply throughout the claim, including:
Where a claim succeeds, a success fee is taken as a legally capped percentage of the compensation. This ensures the largest share will go straight to you.
Reach out to our solicitors today to discuss your misdiagnosis compensation claim and learn more about how our No Win No Fee service works:
Below, we answer some common questions about misdiagnosis compensation claims.
Yes, diagnostic test errors can lead to a claim if clinical results are misread, not followed up, or recorded incorrectly, and this causes you avoidable harm.
If your condition was diagnosed correctly later on, you may still be able to make a medical negligence claim if a diagnostic delay avoidably caused your health to worsen.
Yes, you can request access to your medical records, including your complete GP history, hospital files, and diagnostic test results. These files can help clarify which symptoms were reported, which decisions were made, and whether key information was followed up.
If you were given the wrong treatment due to a misdiagnosis, you may be able to make a compensation claim for the avoidable physical and psychological harm caused by that substandard care.
Yes, you can make a complaint before starting a misdiagnosis compensation claim, and the response may help clarify what happened during your care.
No, making a claim will not affect your future medical treatment, as healthcare providers are required to care for you appropriately.
You usually do not need to go to court for a misdiagnosis claim, as most cases are resolved through negotiation. If a hearing becomes necessary, Accident Claims will manage all the preparation and guide you through each stage so you know exactly what to expect.
The time a misdiagnosis compensation claim takes often depends on the availability of evidence and on whether the healthcare provider accepts responsibility. Our solicitors focus on progressing your case as efficiently as possible, keeping you fully updated while we gather the evidence needed to support your claim.
We have several guides focused on misdiagnosis claims, including:
External resources:
Please reach out for more guidance on the misdiagnosis compensation claims process.