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Truck Accident Lawyer in Buckeye, AZ



Truck Accident Lawyer in Buckeye, AZ

No recovery, no fee. Free consultation. If a truck accident in Buckeye left you with injuries, medical bills, or lost wages, you have a right to full compensation from the at-fault party and their insurer. We handle the fight so you can handle recovery.

Why truck accident cases in Buckeye need a local lawyer

I-10 west of Buckeye toward the California line is a documented fatigue-crash zone because it is the first stretch of interstate for drivers leaving the Phoenix metro, and SR-85 south to Gila Bend carries heavy NAFTA truck traffic and has deadly two-lane sections Dust storms blowing across I-10 from agricultural fields trigger sudden zero-visibility crashes, and Buckeye’s growth-rate ranking as America’s fastest-growing city has outpaced road safety upgrades

Major trauma cases in Buckeye route to Abrazo Buckeye Emergency Center with trauma transfers to Abrazo West Campus in Goodyear (Level III (Abrazo West)). Responding law enforcement is typically Buckeye Police Department and Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office. Civil claims are filed in the Maricopa County Superior Court at Maricopa County Superior Court in Phoenix and the Southwest Regional Court Center in Avondale. Knowing how each of these institutions handles documentation, evidence preservation, and scheduling is part of what local experience gives you.

Arizona law that controls your case

Statute of limitations

Arizona’s two-year statute of limitations under ARS 12-542 applies. Government-vehicle claims require a 180-day notice under ARS 12-821.01. Send spoliation letters immediately; trucking companies overwrite ECM data on rolling windows and log discipline is tight.

Comparative fault

Pure comparative fault under ARS 12-2505 applies. Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSR) violations expand liability. Multiple defendants are common: driver, carrier, owner, loader, maintenance contractor, and parts manufacturer.

What you can recover

Commercial policies carry higher limits (federal minimum $750,000 for interstate motor carriers, often $1M+). Injuries are severe due to mass differential. Catastrophic cases exceed seven figures and sometimes eight.

Insurance coverage and policy stacking

Interstate trucks must carry federal minimums (49 CFR 387). In-state trucks follow Arizona limits. Excess and umbrella layers are standard. A lawyer traces every policy in the tower.

What to do in the first week after a truck accident in Buckeye

  1. Get medical evaluation even if you feel fine. Concussions and soft-tissue injuries often surface hours or days later.
  2. Preserve evidence: photos of the scene, vehicles, property, and injuries; witness contact info; and a written timeline while memory is fresh.
  3. Report as required: police for a crash, property owner for a fall, county animal control for a bite.
  4. Do not give a recorded statement to the at-fault party’s insurer. You are not required to, and it almost always hurts your case.
  5. Do not post about the incident on social media. Insurers surveil public posts.
  6. Call a Arizona personal injury lawyer before the at-fault insurer gets to you.

How contingency fee works

Our fee is a percentage of the recovery, paid only if we win. If there is no recovery, there is no fee. The initial consultation is free. Case costs (filing fees, medical records, experts) are advanced by the firm and reimbursed from the settlement, not out of your pocket. A contingency fee aligns our interest with yours: we get paid when you get paid.

Nearby truck accident lawyers in AZ

Other practice areas in Buckeye

Crash data: Buckeye, 2024

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

Total reportable crashes970
Injury crashes345
Fatal crashes7
People killed7
People injured572
Alcohol-related crashes49

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are truck cases different from car cases?

Commercial policies carry higher limits, multiple parties can be liable (driver, carrier, owner, loader, maintenance), and federal FMCSR violations expand liability. Evidence is on a rolling overwrite window; act fast.

What evidence matters most?

ECM/black-box data, driver hours-of-service logs, dashcam footage, maintenance records, drug and alcohol test results, and the bill of lading. Send a preservation letter the first week.

How long do I have to file?

Arizona’s two-year statute of limitations under ARS 12-542 applies. Government-vehicle claims require a 180-day notice under ARS 12-821.01. Send spoliation letters immediately; trucking companies overwrite ECM data on rolling windows and log discipline is tight.

What does it cost to hire a Buckeye truck accident lawyer?

Nothing upfront. Contingency fee: no recovery, no fee. Case costs advanced and reimbursed from settlement. Free consultation.

Talk to a Arizona truck accident lawyer now

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Call or submit a case form and we will respond within one business day.