Car Accident Lawyer in Peoria, AZ
No recovery, no fee. Free consultation. If a car accident in Peoria 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 car accident cases in Peoria need a local lawyer
US-60 (Grand Avenue) through Peoria is a diagonal arterial with dozens of signalized intersections and is one of the top injury-crash corridors in the West Valley. Loop 101 at Bell Road and at Thunderbird Road are consistent crash clusters Sun-glare east-west crashes on Bell Road during morning and evening commutes are a documented hazard, and spring-training traffic around Peoria Sports Complex concentrates rental-car drivers unfamiliar with the area
Major trauma cases in Peoria route to Banner Boswell Medical Center and HonorHealth Deer Valley Medical Center (Level I (HonorHealth Deer Valley)). Responding law enforcement is typically Peoria 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. 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 statute of limitations for personal injury is two years from the date of the crash under ARS 12-542. Wrongful death also follows a two-year window from the date of death. Missing this deadline almost always bars the claim entirely.
Comparative fault
Arizona follows pure comparative fault under ARS 12-2505. You can recover even if you were partly at fault; your compensation is reduced by your fault percentage. Insurance companies routinely inflate your fault to cut the payout. A lawyer negotiates that arithmetic.
What you can recover
Recoverable damages include past and future medical bills, lost wages, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment, and property damage. Catastrophic injuries with clear liability drive values into six and seven figures.
Insurance coverage and policy stacking
Arizona minimum liability is 25/50/15 (ARS 28-4009). Many drivers carry only the minimum. Uninsured motorist and underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy often becomes the primary recovery source when the at-fault driver is underinsured.
What to do in the first week after a car accident in Peoria
- Get medical evaluation even if you feel fine. Concussions and soft-tissue injuries often surface hours or days later.
- Preserve evidence: photos of the scene, vehicles, property, and injuries; witness contact info; and a written timeline while memory is fresh.
- Report as required: police for a crash, property owner for a fall, county animal control for a bite.
- 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.
- Do not post about the incident on social media. Insurers surveil public posts.
- 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 car accident lawyers in AZ
- Car Accident Lawyer in Avondale, AZ
- Car Accident Lawyer in Goodyear, AZ
- Car Accident Lawyer in Scottsdale, AZ
Other practice areas in Peoria
- Truck Accident Lawyer in Peoria
- Motorcycle Accident Lawyer in Peoria
- Slip and Fall Lawyer in Peoria
- Dog Bite Lawyer in Peoria
- Personal Injury Lawyer in Peoria (all practice areas)
- Car Accident (statewide overview)
Crash data: Peoria, 2024
The following crash statistics are reported by the state for Peoria in 2024. They set the backdrop for any personal injury claim in this jurisdiction.
| Total reportable crashes | 3,009 |
| Injury crashes | 1,040 |
| Fatal crashes | 18 |
| People killed | 21 |
| People injured | 1,502 |
| Alcohol-related crashes | 119 |
Source: Arizona Department of Transportation, 2024 Motor Vehicle Crash Facts (azdot.gov)
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to file a car accident claim in Arizona?
Arizona’s statute of limitations for personal injury is two years from the date of the crash under ARS 12-542. Wrongful death also follows a two-year window from the date of death. Missing this deadline almost always bars the claim entirely.
Can I recover if I was partly at fault?
Arizona follows pure comparative fault under ARS 12-2505. You can recover even if you were partly at fault; your compensation is reduced by your fault percentage. Insurance companies routinely inflate your fault to cut the payout. A lawyer negotiates that arithmetic.
What’s my case worth?
Past and future medical bills, lost wages and earning capacity, pain and suffering, and property damage. Catastrophic injuries with clear liability drive values into six and seven figures.
What does it cost to hire a Peoria car accident lawyer?
Nothing upfront. We work on contingency: no recovery, no fee. The consultation is free. Case costs (records, experts, filing fees) are advanced by the firm and reimbursed from the settlement.
Talk to a Arizona car accident lawyer now
Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Call or submit a case form and we will respond within one business day.