Tucson Car Accident Lawyer | ARS 12-2505 | Wood Injury Law

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Tucson Car Accident Lawyer | Pure Comparative Fault + I-10 + I-19 | Wood Injury Law

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Tucson Metro Car Accident Cases

Tucson Car Accident Lawyer — Pure Comparative Fault, I-10 + I-19 Corridor Crashes

Most Tucson car accidents resolve in the first call between the at-fault driver’s insurance and the victim, on terms the victim does not realize are unfavorable. The pure comparative fault statute (ARS 12-2505) and the 2-year SOL (ARS 12-542) shape what the case is worth.

Pure Fault
Recover even if predominantly at fault — ARS 12-2505
2 Years
AZ statute of limitations — ARS 12-542
No-Fault
Arizona is NOT a no-fault state; fault matters

Why Tucson Car Accident Cases Should Not Be Settled on the First Call

The first move in most Tucson car accident defenses is to call the victim within 24-72 hours of the crash, get a recorded statement that locks in a damaging narrative, and offer an early settlement that closes the case before the victim understands the true scope of injuries and damages. Most car accident injuries develop or worsen over the first weeks. Most insurance offers in the first month substantially undervalue the case.

This page covers the Arizona law that governs Tucson car accident cases, the corridors where crashes concentrate, and the moves to make in the first month.

The Arizona Laws That Govern Tucson Car Accident Cases

Arizona Statute

ARS 12-2505 — Pure Comparative Fault

Arizona is one of the most plaintiff-protective comparative fault states. Recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault but not eliminated even if you were predominantly at fault.

Arizona Statute

ARS 12-542 — Two-Year Statute of Limitations

Personal injury claims must be filed within two years. Government claims under ARS 12-821.01 require notice within 180 days.

Arizona Statute

ARS 20-259.01 — Minimum Liability Coverage

Arizona minimum auto liability is $25,000 per person / $50,000 per accident. Many drivers carry only the minimum. Underinsured motorist coverage on the victim’s own policy frequently applies.

The Tucson Corridors Where This Case Type Concentrates

I-10 corridor through Tucson

The principal east-west freight corridor connecting Phoenix to Tucson to El Paso. Heavy commercial truck volume year-round. The Tucson metro section through downtown and to the I-19 system interchange carries the highest density of crashes in the region.

I-19 corridor (Tucson to Nogales)

North-south freight corridor connecting Tucson to the Mexico border. Heavy commercial truck traffic mixed with commuter traffic, particularly through the Sahuarita and Green Valley areas.

I-10 east of Tucson to Benson and Willcox

Long sight lines, high speed, remote. When crashes happen here they tend to be severe, and emergency response distances are significant.

Tanque Verde Road and Catalina Highway

Mountain access routes attract recreational traffic. Drivers crossing centerlines on curves is a recurring pattern, particularly on Catalina Highway / Mount Lemmon Road.

Speedway, Broadway, and Grant Road arterials

Major east-west surface streets through Tucson. Signal violations and lane-change crashes recur at the I-10 interchanges.

Common Causes of Tucson Car Accidents

  • Distracted driving (cell phone use, leading cause)
  • Speeding and aggressive driving
  • Impaired drivers (Tucson DUI patterns)
  • Failure to yield at left turns
  • Rear-end collisions in stopped traffic (I-10, I-19 congestion)
  • Unsafe lane changes
  • Wrong-way driving (recurring AZ pattern, frequently fatal)
  • Monsoon weather hazards (dust storms, sudden heavy rain)

Who Can Be Held Liable in a Tucson Car Case

  • The at-fault driver
  • The driver’s employer (scope of employment)
  • A bar/restaurant under Arizona dram shop
  • A government entity for road design or signal issues
  • Vehicle/parts manufacturers
  • Mechanic or service shop for negligent repair

Damages You Can Recover

  • Past and future medical expenses
  • Lost income and earning capacity
  • Pain and suffering
  • Property damage
  • Disfigurement and permanent impairment
  • Loss of consortium
  • Punitive damages where applicable
  • Wrongful death damages where applicable

The First Month After a Tucson Car Accident

  1. Get full medical evaluation including imaging.
  2. Photograph the scene and vehicle damage before repair.
  3. Get the crash report from Tucson Police or DPS.
  4. Do not give a recorded statement to the at-fault insurer.
  5. Document medical bills and out-of-pocket expenses.
  6. Contact a Tucson car accident lawyer within 30 days.
  7. Keep a daily symptom journal.

Why Wood Injury Law for Your Tucson Car Accident Case

  • No fees unless we recover.
  • Free initial consultation.
  • Direct attorney attention.
  • Statewide Arizona focus including Tucson and Pima County.
  • Pure comparative fault expertise.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I have to file?
Two years under ARS 12-542. Government claims 180 days.
I was partially at fault. Can I recover?
Yes. Pure comparative fault under ARS 12-2505 allows recovery even if predominantly at fault.
The insurance company called within 24 hours. Should I give a statement?
No legal obligation before consulting counsel.
The at-fault driver had no insurance. What now?
Your own uninsured motorist coverage applies if you have it (Arizona requires insurers to offer UM).
How are damages calculated?
Documented bills, employment records, expert projections from physicians and life-care planners. Non-economic damages based on severity and permanence.
How long does a Tucson car accident case typically take?
6-12 months for clear-liability capped-insurance; 18-36 months for catastrophic disputed cases.
My injuries developed later. Does that matter?
Common with whiplash and soft tissue. Documented medical evaluation in the first weeks establishes the causal link.
What does it cost to hire a Tucson car accident lawyer?
Nothing out of pocket. Contingency: no fees unless we recover.

Hit in Tucson?

The at-fault driver’s insurance is already setting the comparative fault number against you. Free consultation, no fee unless we recover.

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