Find a Truck Accident Lawyer in Your State

Each state has unique laws affecting your truck accident claim. Find experienced attorneys who know your state's statutes of limitations, fault rules, and local courts.

Important State Law Differences

1-Year Statute of Limitations

These states have the shortest filing deadline. Act immediately if you were injured here:

Contributory Negligence States

In these states, being even 1% at fault can bar your recovery entirely:

State Law Comparison

State Statute of Limitations Fault System Min. Insurance
Alabama 2 years Contributory negligence (pure) $25,000/$50,000/$25,000
Alaska 2 years Pure comparative fault $50,000/$100,000/$25,000
Arizona 2 years Pure comparative fault $25,000/$50,000/$15,000
Arkansas 3 years Modified comparative fault (49%) $25,000/$50,000/$25,000
California 2 years Pure comparative fault $15,000/$30,000/$5,000
Colorado 3 years Modified comparative fault (50%) $25,000/$50,000/$15,000
Connecticut 2 years Modified comparative fault (51%) $25,000/$50,000/$25,000
Delaware 2 years Modified comparative fault (51%) $25,000/$50,000/$10,000
Florida 4 years Modified comparative fault (51%) $10,000 PIP (no-fault)
Georgia 2 years Modified comparative fault (50%) $25,000/$50,000/$25,000
Hawaii 2 years Modified comparative fault (51%) $20,000 PIP (no-fault)
Idaho 2 years Modified comparative fault (50%) $25,000/$50,000/$15,000
Illinois 2 years Modified comparative fault (51%) $25,000/$50,000/$20,000
Indiana 2 years Modified comparative fault (51%) $25,000/$50,000/$25,000
Iowa 2 years Modified comparative fault (51%) $20,000/$40,000/$15,000
Showing 15 of 50 states. Click any state above to see full details.

Not Sure Which State's Laws Apply?

Truck accidents often involve multiple states (driver from one state, accident in another, company in a third). Our attorneys can help determine the best jurisdiction for your case.