Buckeye Uninsured Motorist Claim Lawyer
Hit by an uninsured or underinsured driver in Buckeye or Maricopa County? Your own UM/UIM coverage may stack across vehicles and household policies. We force the insurer to pay every layer. Free consultation, no fee unless we win.
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Buckeye is one of Arizona’s fastest-growing cities, sprawling across the west valley with new master-planned communities (Verrado, Sundance, Festival Ranch). Civil cases file at the West Court Complex of Maricopa County Superior Court located in Buckeye. Wood Injury Law handles uninsured and underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) claims for Buckeye residents injured anywhere in Maricopa County or across Arizona. Roughly 1 in 5 Arizona drivers carries no auto insurance — and many who do carry coverage hold only the state minimum 25/50/15 limits, which often won’t cover a serious crash. When the at-fault driver can’t pay, your own UM/UIM coverage becomes the source of recovery.
The Uninsured Driver Landscape in Buckeye
Buckeye’s growth has outpaced infrastructure, and I-10 collisions involving uninsured drivers are common as transient construction workers, agricultural workers, and through-traffic share the corridor with established residents.
If you’ve been hit by an uninsured or underinsured driver in Buckeye, treatment usually begins at Banner Estrella Medical Center (nearest hospital) or Abrazo West Campus. Once you’re stabilized, the UM/UIM claim against your own carrier becomes the next step. Civil cases for Maricopa County file in the Superior Court of Arizona in Maricopa County (West Court Complex – Buckeye), and bad-faith disputes against your own insurer can be filed there as well.
UM/UIM Coverage Under Arizona Law
Under A.R.S. § 20-259.01, every Arizona auto insurance policy must offer UM/UIM coverage, though the insured can decline in writing. The two coverages serve different purposes:
- Uninsured Motorist (UM): Pays your damages when the at-fault driver had no insurance, was driving stolen, or hit-and-run.
- Underinsured Motorist (UIM): Pays the difference when the at-fault driver had insurance but their policy limits don’t cover your full damages.
How “Stacking” Works for Buckeye Residents
Arizona allows inter-policy stacking and intra-policy stacking of UM/UIM coverage. The practical implications for Buckeye residents are large:
- Intra-policy stacking: If you have multiple vehicles on a single policy each with UM/UIM, those limits stack. Three vehicles each with $50,000 UM = $150,000 available.
- Inter-policy stacking: If you live in a household with multiple policies (your policy + a parent’s policy, or your policy + a spouse’s), coverage from each policy can apply to the same claim under defined conditions.
- Stacking across resident relatives: A child living at home in Buckeye may be able to stack their parents’ UM/UIM coverage on top of their own under A.R.S. § 20-259.01.
Insurance companies do not volunteer this. They typically apply only the most obvious single policy. We pull every household policy on file, identify every applicable layer, and demand they all pay.
When You Need a Buckeye UM/UIM Lawyer
- Hit-and-run crash in Buckeye or Maricopa County where the other driver was never identified
- At-fault driver carried only state-minimum $25,000 and your medical bills exceed that
- Your own insurer denies UM coverage
- Multiple injured parties competing for one policy’s limits
- Insurer offers a lowball settlement and pressures you to sign a release
- You suspect additional household policies should apply but the insurer says no
Bad Faith — When Your Own Insurer Won’t Pay
Arizona recognizes a tort of insurance bad faith. When your own insurance company unreasonably denies, delays, or underpays a valid UM/UIM claim, you can sue for the full amount owed plus punitive damages and attorney’s fees. The Arizona Supreme Court established this in Noble v. National American Life Insurance Co., and subsequent cases including Zilisch v. State Farm set the standard for what constitutes bad faith. Insurers know the law. They also know most claimants don’t pursue it. We do.
What to Do After an Uninsured Driver Hits You in Buckeye
- Call 911 and get the police report. The Buckeye Police (or Maricopa County Sheriff if outside city limits) needs to document that the other driver had no valid insurance or fled the scene.
- Get medical attention at Banner Estrella Medical Center (nearest hospital). Even minor symptoms should be documented immediately — many soft-tissue injuries present hours or days later.
- Photograph the scene, vehicles, and any visible injuries. If hit-and-run, photograph any partial license plate or describe the vehicle.
- Notify your insurance company promptly. Most policies require notice within a defined window (often 30 days for hit-and-run).
- Do not give a recorded statement before talking to a lawyer. Your own insurer is now adverse to you on the UM/UIM claim.
- Call Wood Injury Law before signing anything. Initial UM/UIM offers from your own carrier are routinely 20-40% of case value.
Arizona Statute of Limitations on UM/UIM Claims
UM/UIM claims in Arizona are governed by the underlying insurance contract — typically subject to a two-year written-contract limitations period from the date the claim arose, though some policies attempt to shorten this. Bad-faith claims are subject to A.R.S. § 12-542‘s two-year tort limit. Don’t rely on the policy language alone — call us to confirm the actual deadline that applies to your claim.
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Frequently Asked Questions — UM/UIM in Buckeye
What if I was hit by an uninsured driver in Buckeye but only have state-minimum coverage?
Your UM coverage equals whatever limits you elected on your own policy. If you carry $25,000 UM, that’s the maximum from your own insurer. If multiple vehicles are on the policy, those limits stack. If a resident relative has their own policy, that may also apply. We pull every applicable layer.
What court handles UM/UIM disputes for Buckeye residents?
Civil cases for Maricopa County residents file in the Superior Court of Arizona in Maricopa County (West Court Complex – Buckeye). Bad-faith claims against your own insurer can be filed there as well. Many UM/UIM disputes settle before suit; others require litigation through the Superior Court.
Will making a UM claim raise my insurance rates?
UM/UIM claims for not-at-fault crashes generally should not raise your rates — they are not the same as an at-fault claim. If your carrier attempts to raise rates anyway, that itself can be evidence of bad faith.
Can I sue my own insurance company if they refuse to pay?
Yes. Arizona recognizes insurance bad faith as a tort. When your carrier unreasonably denies or underpays a valid UM/UIM claim, you can sue for the underlying claim amount plus consequential damages, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees.
What if my UM/UIM coverage was rejected when I bought the policy?
Arizona law requires UM/UIM rejection to be in writing and explicit. If the insurer can’t produce a signed waiver, the rejection may be invalid and coverage may apply by operation of law. We routinely check this — many policies don’t have a valid rejection on file.
How long do UM/UIM cases take?
Most resolve in 4 to 12 months once medical treatment is complete. Cases involving denied coverage, bad-faith claims, or multiple layers of stacked policies can take longer — but typically result in larger settlements because of the complexity and the bad-faith exposure on the insurer.
What does it cost to hire a Buckeye UM/UIM lawyer?
Nothing upfront. We work on contingency. You pay nothing unless we recover money for you. Initial consultation is free.
Talk to a Buckeye UM/UIM Lawyer Today
Wood Injury Law handles uninsured and underinsured motorist claims throughout Buckeye, Maricopa County, and statewide Arizona. Free consultation, no fee unless we recover money. Call (480) 576-6147 24 hours a day, or send a message below.
Disclaimer: Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Settlement amounts vary based on injury severity, applicable coverage, fault, and venue. Hiring a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely on advertising.
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 crashes | 970 |
| Injury crashes | 345 |
| Fatal crashes | 7 |
| People killed | 7 |
| People injured | 572 |
| Alcohol-related crashes | 49 |
Source: Arizona Department of Transportation, 2024 Motor Vehicle Crash Facts (azdot.gov)