Motorcycle Accident Lawyer in Kingman, AZ | No Fee Unless We Win

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Motorcycle Accident Lawyer in Kingman, AZ

Kingman Motorcycle Accident

Motorcycle Accident Lawyer in Kingman, AZ

I-40 and US-93 carry some of Arizona’s highest commercial truck volume through Kingman. Mohave County.

★★★★★ 4.6/5 · 80+ reviews · Nearly $40M recovered

Nearly $40M
Recovered for clients
80+
5-star reviews
2 Years
AZ statute of limitations
24/7
Response

Kingman Road Network and Context

Kingman is the county seat of Mohave County and the primary commercial hub for northwestern Arizona. I-40 runs east-west through Kingman as one of the nation’s primary transcontinental freight corridors — the Kingman area carries sustained commercial truck volume connecting California and Las Vegas to Arizona and the rest of the Southwest, and the I-40 corridor through Mohave County has a well-documented history of truck-involved fatalities. US-93 runs north from Kingman toward Hoover Dam and Las Vegas through the Black Mountains — one of the highest truck-volume US routes in Arizona, connecting the Phoenix metro and southern Arizona to Las Vegas and carrying both freight and tourist traffic through mountain grades with documented runaway truck hazard points. Andy Devine Avenue (Historic Route 66 / Business I-40) is the primary commercial arterial through downtown Kingman, generating surface-street crash exposure at its major intersections. Stockton Hill Road is the primary north-south commercial corridor connecting the Kingman Airport area and major retail developments to the I-40 corridor. SR-68 runs west from Kingman toward Laughlin and the Nevada state line, carrying casino and recreational traffic through the desert.

Kingman is the county seat of Mohave County — Mohave County Superior Court is located in Kingman (401 E Spring St, Kingman AZ). Kingman Regional Medical Center (1915 Stockton Hill Rd, Kingman AZ) is the primary trauma facility for the region. Kingman PD handles in-city crashes; Mohave County Sheriff covers the surrounding county; DPS handles I-40, US-93, SR-68, and other state and federal highway crashes in the area.

Motorcycle Crash Risk in Kingman

US-93 north of Kingman through the Black Mountains is one of Arizona’s most notorious motorcycle crash corridors — the grade, curves, and high truck volume create conditions that produce fatal motorcycle crashes at a rate disproportionate to general traffic volume. Historic Route 66 and SR-68 toward Laughlin draw touring riders through the area. I-40 carries motorcycle traffic at full freeway speed mixed with heavy commercial truck volume. ARS 28-903 lane filtering is legal under defined conditions; insurers frequently cite it to argue rider fault even when conditions were met.

What You Can Recover

  • Medical bills
  • Motorcycle and gear replacement
  • Lost wages
  • Pain and suffering
  • Permanent disability

Our Fee Structure

Contingency fee. No fee unless we recover compensation for you. Free consultation with Josh Wood.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to file a motorcycle accident claim?

2 years from the crash date under ARS 12-542. Contact an attorney as soon as possible.

Does lane filtering affect my fault?

ARS 28-903 permits lane filtering under defined conditions. Insurers misuse this statute to argue fault. That argument fails when the statute’s conditions were met.

What can I recover after a motorcycle crash?

Medical bills, motorcycle and gear replacement, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Permanent injuries significantly increase case value.

What if the at-fault driver is underinsured?

UM/UIM coverage (ARS 20-259.01) protects you when the at-fault driver’s policy is insufficient. We review all available coverage at intake.

Ready to Talk?

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Speak directly with Josh Wood.

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Frequently Asked Questions — Kingman Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

Can I still recover damages if I wasn’t wearing a helmet in Arizona?
Yes — Arizona does not require helmets for riders 18 and older under ARS § 28-964, so not wearing one cannot be used to bar your claim, though it may affect damages related to head injuries.
How long do I have to file a motorcycle accident claim in Kingman?
Two years from the accident date under ARS § 12-542.
What if the driver says they didn’t see me?
‘I didn’t see the motorcycle’ is not a defense — drivers have a duty to observe the road. We use accident reconstruction, witness statements, and camera footage to establish liability.
Can I recover if I was lane-splitting at the time of the crash?
Lane-splitting is not explicitly illegal in Arizona, but it affects comparative fault analysis. Under pure comparative negligence, you can still recover reduced by your fault percentage.
What damages are available after a Kingman motorcycle accident?
Medical bills, rehabilitation, lost income, pain and suffering, motorcycle repair or replacement, and disfigurement damages for road rash or scarring.