Structured Settlement
A stream of future payments from a legal settlement or insurance award; like notes, these payment streams can be sold for a lump sum at a discount.
A structured settlement is an arrangement in which money owed from a legal settlement or insurance claim is paid out as a stream of periodic payments over time rather than as a single lump sum. They are common in personal-injury, wrongful-death, and workers'-compensation cases, and are typically funded by an annuity from an insurance company. Structured settlements are not mortgage notes, but they belong to the broader world of cash flow buying — and they share the core principle that animates note buying: a stream of future payments can be sold today for a lump sum at a discount.
Why they exist
Structured settlements were designed to protect recipients: spreading payments over years provides long-term financial security, avoids the risk of a large sum being spent quickly, and historically carried tax advantages on personal-injury awards. The recipient receives, say, $2,000 a month for 20 years, or scheduled lump sums at intervals.
Selling a structured settlement
Life circumstances change, and a recipient may need cash sooner than the schedule allows — to buy a home, cover medical bills, or eliminate debt. They can sell some or all of their future payments to a factoring company (a buyer of payment streams) for a lump sum now. The math mirrors note pricing exactly:
- The buyer computes the present value of the future payments at a required discount rate.
- Because money now is worth more than money later, the lump sum is less than the sum of the payments — a discount that compensates the buyer for time and risk.
- The further out the payments and the higher the required yield, the larger the discount.
A critical legal difference from notes
Unlike a mortgage note sale, transferring structured-settlement payments generally requires court approval under federal and state Structured Settlement Protection Acts (SSPAs). A judge must find the transfer is in the seller's best interest before it can proceed, with disclosure of the discount rate and the effective interest cost. This consumer protection exists because of past abuses, and it makes structured-settlement transfers slower and more regulated than ordinary note sales.
How it relates to note buying
Many companies that buy owner-financed notes also buy other cash flows — structured settlements, annuities, and business notes — because the underlying skill is the same: valuing a future payment stream. The terminology, present-value math, and discount concept carry directly across.
What it means if you hold one
Mortgage Note Capital focuses on real estate notes (mortgage notes, contracts for deed, land contracts). If your asset is a structured settlement rather than a real-estate-secured note, the buyer and process differ — and any sale will require court approval under the applicable SSPA. The good news is the valuation logic is identical to a note: larger, sooner, and more certain payments are worth more today.
This is general information, not legal, tax, or financial advice; structured-settlement transfers are court-supervised and state-regulated.