Car Accident Lawyer in Scottsdale, AZ | No Fee Unless We Win

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Scottsdale Car Accident Lawyer | AZ Pure Comparative Fault + SR-101 & Shea | Wood Injury Law

From high-speed merges on SR-101 (Pima Freeway) to tourist traffic on Old Town Scottsdale streets, accidents in Scottsdale carry real complexity. Insurance companies treat Scottsdale claims like any other: find a way to reduce what they pay. Wood Injury Law gives you a former insurance defense attorney on your side, no fee unless we win, and a free case review to start.

Why Scottsdale Accident Victims Choose Wood Injury Law

Common Causes of Car Accidents in Scottsdale

Arizona’s Fault Law and What It Means for Your Claim

Arizona uses pure comparative fault under ARS 12-2505. You can recover compensation even if you were partly responsible for the crash. Your damages are reduced by your fault percentage, but you are not barred from recovering at any level of fault.

In Scottsdale, insurance companies often point to luxury vehicle involvement, tourist status, or driver speed on SR-101 to argue that your fault percentage is higher than it actually is. These arguments are built into their playbook. Adjusters on high-value Scottsdale claims are usually experienced negotiators with clear financial incentives to keep settlements down.

Josh Wood built those arguments for insurers. He now builds the counter-case: documenting actual fault allocation, retaining accident reconstruction experts when warranted, and pressing for the full value of your damages including future medical costs and non-economic losses that insurers routinely undercount.

What to Do After a Car Accident in Scottsdale

  1. Call 911 immediately. Get medical attention even if you feel fine at the scene. Soft tissue injuries and TBIs can take hours or days to fully manifest.
  2. Photograph everything: vehicle damage, road markings, traffic signals, the SR-101 interchange if relevant, and your injuries.
  3. Get witness contact information before anyone disperses.
  4. Do not speak to the other driver’s insurer without legal counsel. In Scottsdale cases involving high-value vehicles or tourist parties, the opposing insurer may have more resources than you expect.
  5. Call Wood Injury Law. Earlier involvement protects evidence and prevents early settlement traps.

Scottsdale Car Accident FAQ

How long do I have to file a claim in Arizona?
Two years from the accident date under ARS 12-542. That deadline is firm. Miss it and the court will not hear your case, regardless of how strong it is.

What if the other driver has no insurance or not enough coverage?
Your uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage applies. In high-value Scottsdale accidents, the gap between what the at-fault driver’s policy covers and what your damages actually are can be significant. Wood Injury Law handles UM/UIM claims and knows how to fight when your own insurer tries to lowball your coverage.

How much is my case worth?
Scottsdale cases frequently involve higher medical costs, luxury vehicle repair, and non-economic damages that insurers routinely minimize. Medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and future care all factor in. The first number you get from the insurer reflects what they want to pay, not what your claim is worth.

Do I need a lawyer for a car accident in Scottsdale?
No requirement. But Scottsdale claims often attract experienced adjusters working to minimize high-value settlements. A free call to Wood Injury Law takes no time and gives you a clear sense of whether legal representation changes the outcome in your case.

Contact Wood Injury Law — Free Case Review in Scottsdale

Free call, no obligation, no fee unless we win. We represent Scottsdale accident victims and clients across the state of Arizona.

Crash data: Scottsdale, 2024

The following crash statistics are reported by the state for Scottsdale in 2024. They set the backdrop for any personal injury claim in this jurisdiction.

Total reportable crashes4,219
Injury crashes1,421
Fatal crashes15
People killed15
People injured2,113
Alcohol-related crashes226

Source: Arizona Department of Transportation, 2024 Motor Vehicle Crash Facts (azdot.gov)