Many injury cases, especially serious and catastrophic, can do more than leave someone with medical bills and time away from work. In injury lawsuits, lost earning capacity refers to the future income a person may no longer be able to earn because the injury has changed their ability to work, advance, or stay in the same line of employment. When this kind of long-term financial harm follows an accident, our Idaho injury lawyer at Craig Swapp & Associates can help build a case that reflects not only what has already been lost, but what may be lost for months or years to come.

What Is Lost Earning Capacity in Injury Lawsuits?

Lost earning capacity is compensation for a reduced ability to earn income in the future. It’s not limited to what a person was making on the date of the injury. Instead, it looks at what the person likely could’ve earned over time if the injury hadn’t happened, compared with what they can realistically earn now. 

Idaho recognizes “the present cash value of the future earning capacity lost because of the injury” as a recoverable item of economic damage, taking into account factors such as earning power, age, health, life expectancy, and mental and physical abilities.

Lost earning capacity is different from lost wages. Lost wages usually cover the paycheck already missed during recovery: the weeks out of work after surgery, the hours missed for medical appointments, or the income lost while under lifting restrictions. Lost earning capacity goes further.

Injuries That Result in Lost Income Capacity

Not every injury leads to a long-term reduction in earning power. This type of damage is more common when the physical or cognitive effects of an injury interfere with the kind of work a person used to do or hoped to do in the future.

That often includes spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries, severe fractures, amputations, crush injuries, serious burns, chronic pain conditions, and other forms of serious and catastrophic injuries. 

Real-life examples of accidents resulting in lost earning capacity include:

  • A construction worker with permanent lifting limits may no longer qualify for heavy labor. 
  • A nurse with shoulder damage may not be able to safely perform patient handling tasks. 
  • A delivery driver with chronic back pain may lose the ability to stay on the road full-time. 
  • A person with a brain injury may still be employable, but no longer able to perform work requiring sustained concentration, memory, or fast decision-making.

In each of these situations, an injury lawsuit may focus on the gap between the person’s pre-injury earning path and post-injury reality.

How to Prove Lost Earning Capacity After an Injury

Because lost earning capacity concerns the future, proof matters. Idaho law allows recovery, but an injury lawsuit still has to be supported by evidence rather than guesswork. 

  • Medical records often form the starting point. They can show permanent impairment, ongoing restrictions, reduced mobility, pain symptoms, or the need for future treatment. 
  • Employment records, tax returns, pay stubs, and benefit records help show what the person was earning before the injury. 
  • In more substantial cases, lawyers may also work with vocational professionals who assess what jobs remain reasonably available, along with economic analysts who project future losses into present-dollar value. 

This is especially important for younger workers, self-employed people, union workers, or people whose careers were still growing when the injury happened. A personal injury lawsuit may need to show not only current lost income, but also likely raises, promotions, work-life expectancy, and employment benefits that the person probably would have received.

How to Calculate Damages for Lost Earning Capacity

There is no one-size-fits-all formula. The goal is to estimate the present cash value of future lost earning ability. This often means comparing two paths: 

  • What the person likely would have earned without the injury 
  • What the person can likely earn now despite the injury

Idaho’s jury instructions use this present-value approach for future earning capacity damages.

The calculation may consider:

  • Pre-injury wages or salary
  • Expected career growth
  • Fringe benefits
  • Likely work-life span
  • Permanent physical restrictions
  • Reduced hours or reduced job options
  • Retraining needs or forced career changes

Personal injury cases are also shaped by other rules that can affect recovery. Under Idaho Code section 6-801, an injured person can still recover damages so long as that person’s share of fault isn’t as great as the fault of the person being sued, but the award is reduced by the plaintiff’s percentage of fault. 

Why Hire a Lawyer for Injury Lawsuits in Idaho

A lost earning capacity claim can be one of the hardest parts to prove in an injury lawsuit. The work involves gathering medical support, employment records, wage history, and long-term projections that fit the facts of the person’s career.

This is where personal injury lawyers in Idaho can make a real difference. 

A lawyer can:

  • Identify the records needed
  • Frame the claim around Idaho’s personal injury laws
  • Answer fault arguments under the state’s comparative negligence law
  • Present the human side of what the injury has changed

For personal injury lawyers with a long-standing presence in injury litigation, this also means understanding how to evaluate harm that doesn’t end when the person leaves the hospital.

Ensure Injury Lawsuit Settlement Reflects Your Lost Earning Capacity

After a major accident in Idaho, the true financial loss isn’t always found in the wages already missed. Sometimes, it’s found in what a person can no longer perform, promotions that may never come, or working years cut short by long-term or permanent injury.

When an injury lawsuit involves lost earning capacity, the claim should reflect the full effect of that injury on the person’s future earning potential. At Craig Swapp & Associates, our team of personal injury lawyers in Idaho helps injured people and their families recover compensation that reflects even victims’ lost earning capacity. 

Call us at 360-964-8079 or contact us using our online form to schedule a free initial consultation.

Written By: Ryan Swapp     Legal Review By: Craig Swapp