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Personal Injury Lawyers
Personal injury attorneys help accident victims recover compensation for medical bills, lost wages, and pain & suffering. Most work on contingency — no fee unless you win.
237.001 Personal Injury attorneys listed on AttorneyQnA
Personal injury law gives victims of accidents and negligence the right to compensation for medical bills, lost income, future care, and the pain and disruption caused by their injury. The insurance industry is built around minimizing those payouts — an experienced personal injury attorney levels the field by investigating the crash or incident, documenting your full damages, and forcing the insurer to negotiate against the threat of trial.
What a personal injury lawyer handles
Personal injury practice covers almost any case where someone is hurt because of another party’s negligence or wrongful act. Common case types include:
Car, truck, motorcycle, pedestrian, and bicycle accidents
Slip-and-fall and other premises liability cases
Medical malpractice, birth injury, and hospital negligence
Defective product and pharmaceutical injury claims
Workplace and construction-site injuries (separate from workers’ comp)
Wrongful death claims on behalf of surviving family members
How contingency fees work
Almost every personal injury attorney works on a contingency fee — typically 33% of the settlement before a lawsuit is filed and 40% after — with no upfront cost to you. If the case loses, you owe no attorney fee. This structure makes serious legal representation accessible to anyone who has been hurt, regardless of income.
When to hire a personal injury lawyer
You suffered an injury that required emergency room treatment, surgery, or ongoing care
The insurance adjuster is pressuring you to accept a quick settlement
You missed work or lost income because of the injury
Fault is disputed or multiple parties may share responsibility
The statute of limitations is approaching (usually 1 to 3 years from the date of injury)
Get a free consultation as early as possible. Evidence disappears fast — surveillance video, skid marks, and witness memory all degrade within days. The sooner an attorney starts investigating, the stronger your case.
Case value depends on the severity of your injuries, the total medical expense, lost wages, future care needs, and the insurance limits available. Minor soft-tissue cases typically settle for low five figures; serious injury and wrongful death cases routinely settle for six and seven figures. An attorney can give you a realistic range after reviewing your medical records and the policy limits.
How long does a personal injury case take?
Most cases settle in 6 to 18 months. Cases that require a lawsuit because the insurer refuses fair settlement can take 18 to 36 months through trial. Your attorney can give you a timeline once they understand the scope of your injuries and the defendant’s posture.
Do I need a lawyer or can I deal with the insurance company myself?
For minor property-only or very small medical-bill cases, self-representation is sometimes practical. For any case involving meaningful injury, lost income, or future care, hiring a lawyer typically results in a net higher recovery — even after the contingency fee — because insurers pay represented plaintiffs significantly more than unrepresented ones.
What if I was partly at fault for the accident?
Most states follow a comparative-fault rule that reduces your recovery by your percentage of fault but does not bar it entirely. A handful of states still apply contributory negligence, which can bar recovery if you are even 1% at fault. Your attorney will know the rule in your state and how to position the facts.
How long do I have to file a personal injury lawsuit?
Each state has its own statute of limitations — most range from 1 to 3 years from the date of the injury. Claims against government entities often have shorter notice deadlines (sometimes 60 to 90 days). Missing the deadline almost always ends the case, so consult an attorney immediately.
What costs are taken out of my settlement besides the contingency fee?
Case expenses — filing fees, expert witness costs, medical-record retrieval, deposition transcripts — are reimbursed to the attorney at the end of the case in addition to the percentage fee. Your medical bills (or insurance liens) are also paid from the settlement. A reputable attorney will explain the full breakdown in the retainer agreement.