When a pedestrian is struck by a vehicle in Georgia, they have the right to pursue compensation through a personal injury claim under O.C.G.A. § 51-1-6. This claim can cover medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other damages resulting from the accident. The process typically involves documenting injuries, proving driver negligence, negotiating with insurance companies, and potentially filing a lawsuit if a fair settlement cannot be reached.
Pedestrian accidents result in some of the most severe injuries on Georgia roads because unlike vehicle occupants, pedestrians have no protection against impact. The sudden trauma of being hit by thousands of pounds of metal often leads to broken bones, traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, and internal organ damage. Understanding how to build and pursue your claim properly makes the difference between walking away with inadequate compensation and receiving the full amount needed to cover years of medical treatment and lost income.
Why Pedestrian Accident Claims Are Different From Other Injury Cases
Pedestrian accident claims require a different approach than typical car accident cases because the injuries are almost always more severe and the liability questions can be more complex. Drivers and their insurance companies frequently try to shift blame onto pedestrians by claiming they darted into traffic or were not visible, even when the driver violated traffic laws or failed to exercise proper caution.
Georgia law recognizes that pedestrians are vulnerable road users who deserve protection. O.C.G.A. § 40-6-91 requires drivers to yield the right-of-way to pedestrians crossing within marked crosswalks or at intersections, while O.C.G.A. § 40-6-92 mandates that drivers exercise due care to avoid colliding with any pedestrian on the roadway. However, insurance adjusters often ignore these protections and attempt to use Georgia’s comparative negligence rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 to reduce payouts by arguing the pedestrian was partially at fault. This makes building a strong evidence-based claim from the very beginning absolutely critical.
Common Causes of Pedestrian Accidents in Georgia
Understanding what caused your accident helps establish liability and strengthens your claim. Most pedestrian accidents result from driver negligence rather than pedestrian error, though insurance companies routinely argue otherwise.
Distracted Driving – Drivers texting, talking on phones, eating, or adjusting navigation systems fail to notice pedestrians in crosswalks or on roadway shoulders. Georgia’s hands-free law under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-241 prohibits holding phones while driving, and violations of this law strengthen pedestrian injury claims.
Failure to Yield – Drivers who fail to stop at crosswalks, turn without checking for pedestrians, or ignore pedestrian crossing signals violate O.C.G.A. § 40-6-91 and are liable for resulting injuries. This commonly occurs at busy intersections in Atlanta, Savannah, and Augusta where drivers rush to beat traffic lights.
Speeding – Excessive speed reduces a driver’s reaction time and increases both the likelihood of striking a pedestrian and the severity of injuries. Drivers who exceed posted limits or drive too fast for conditions violate O.C.G.A. § 40-6-181 and face clear liability when they hit pedestrians.
Impaired Driving – Drivers under the influence of alcohol or drugs have reduced awareness, slower reflexes, and impaired judgment. Georgia’s DUI laws under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-391 make driving with a blood alcohol content of 0.08% or higher illegal, and DUI-related pedestrian accidents often result in punitive damages beyond standard compensation.
Poor Visibility Conditions – Drivers who fail to adjust for rain, fog, darkness, or glare from the sun often strike pedestrians they claim they “didn’t see.” However, Georgia law requires drivers to maintain control and operate at safe speeds regardless of weather conditions, meaning poor visibility rarely excuses hitting a pedestrian.
Left-Turn Accidents – Drivers making left turns at intersections frequently focus on oncoming traffic while ignoring pedestrians crossing with the signal. These accidents are particularly common in downtown areas and shopping districts where foot traffic is heavy.
Backing Up – Drivers backing out of parking spaces or driveways strike pedestrians walking behind their vehicles, especially in parking lots and residential areas. O.C.G.A. § 40-6-240 requires drivers to ensure their path is clear before backing up.
Running Red Lights or Stop Signs – Drivers who blow through traffic control devices often strike pedestrians who have the right-of-way in crosswalks. This violation establishes clear negligence and significantly strengthens your claim.
Types of Injuries Pedestrians Suffer in Traffic Accidents
Pedestrian accident injuries are typically more severe and life-altering than injuries suffered by vehicle occupants because pedestrians have no protective barrier. The force of impact often causes multiple simultaneous injuries requiring extensive medical treatment.
Traumatic Brain Injuries – When a pedestrian’s head strikes the vehicle, windshield, or pavement, they can suffer concussions, skull fractures, brain contusions, or diffuse axonal injury. These injuries can result in permanent cognitive impairment, memory loss, personality changes, and reduced quality of life. Traumatic brain injuries often require years of rehabilitation and may prevent victims from returning to their previous employment.
Spinal Cord Injuries – The impact from a vehicle can fracture vertebrae or damage the spinal cord itself, resulting in partial or complete paralysis. Victims may face paraplegia or quadriplegia depending on the injury location, requiring lifetime medical care, home modifications, assistive devices, and personal care assistance. Spinal cord injuries are among the most expensive injuries to treat over a lifetime.
Broken Bones and Fractures – Pedestrians commonly suffer fractures to legs, arms, hips, pelvis, ribs, and facial bones. Complex fractures may require surgical insertion of plates, screws, or rods, followed by months of physical therapy. Some fractures heal improperly despite treatment, leaving victims with permanent mobility limitations or chronic pain.
Internal Organ Damage – Blunt force trauma can cause internal bleeding, ruptured organs, or damage to the liver, spleen, kidneys, or lungs. These injuries are medical emergencies requiring immediate surgery and can lead to long-term health complications even after initial treatment succeeds.
Soft Tissue Injuries – Torn ligaments, tendons, and muscles cause chronic pain and reduced mobility. While insurance companies often downplay soft tissue injuries as minor, they can prevent victims from performing job duties or enjoying activities they once loved. Soft tissue injuries frequently require extensive physical therapy and may never heal completely.
Road Rash and Lacerations – When pedestrians are dragged or slide across pavement, they suffer severe skin abrasions that can become infected and leave permanent scarring. Deep lacerations may damage muscles, tendons, or nerves beneath the skin, requiring reconstructive surgery.
Amputations – Severe trauma can crush limbs beyond repair, requiring surgical amputation. Pedestrians may also lose limbs when they become trapped under vehicles. Amputation victims face not only the immediate trauma but also the cost of prosthetics, rehabilitation, and psychological counseling.
Psychological Trauma – Beyond physical injuries, pedestrian accident victims often develop post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, depression, and fear of traffic. These psychological injuries are compensable in Georgia claims and should be documented through mental health treatment.
The Personal Injury Claim Process for Pedestrian Accidents
Understanding this process helps you know what to expect and how to protect your rights at each stage.
Seek Immediate Medical Attention
Your health is the first priority after any accident. Seek medical care immediately, even if your injuries seem minor, because some serious conditions like internal bleeding or brain injuries may not show symptoms right away.
Keep all medical records, doctor’s notes, diagnostic results, and bills. Insurance companies will review these documents closely, and any gap in treatment can be used to argue your injuries are not serious. Follow all treatment recommendations and attend every scheduled appointment to demonstrate the ongoing nature of your injuries.
Document the Accident Scene
If you are physically able, take photographs of the accident location, vehicle damage, skid marks, traffic signals, crosswalk markings, and your visible injuries. Get contact information from the driver and any witnesses who saw what happened.
File a police report immediately by calling 911. The responding officer’s report will document the basic facts of the accident and may indicate whether the driver received a citation for traffic violations. This report becomes a critical piece of evidence in your claim, and you can obtain a copy from the law enforcement agency that responded.
Notify Insurance Companies
Report the accident to your own insurance company if you carry personal injury protection or uninsured motorist coverage, as these policies may provide immediate medical payment coverage. However, limit what you say to the at-fault driver’s insurance company until you consult with an attorney.
Insurance adjusters will contact you quickly, often within 24 hours, hoping to obtain a recorded statement while you are still injured, medicated, and unaware of the full extent of your damages. Politely decline to give recorded statements or sign any releases until you understand your rights and the true value of your claim.
Consult with a Personal Injury Attorney
Most personal injury lawyers offer free consultations, giving you a chance to understand your legal options without financial risk. During this meeting, the attorney will assess your claim and explain what steps come next.
An attorney can protect your rights immediately by preserving evidence and interviewing witnesses before memories fade. In Georgia, you typically have two years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33, so acting early matters. For pedestrian accidents involving government vehicles or poorly maintained roadways, special notice requirements may shorten your deadline significantly.
Investigate and Gather Evidence
Once you retain an attorney, they will collect all available evidence including police reports, photographs, surveillance footage, and medical records. They may also work with accident reconstruction specialists depending on the complexity of your case.
This phase can take several weeks or months. The strength of this investigation directly determines the leverage your attorney has during settlement negotiations. Your attorney may also obtain cell phone records to prove the driver was texting, security camera footage showing how the accident occurred, or expert testimony regarding proper driving behavior in similar conditions.
Calculate Your Total Damages
Your attorney will work with you to document every category of loss you have suffered. This includes past and future medical expenses, lost wages and reduced earning capacity, property damage, pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and permanent disability or disfigurement.
For severe injuries, your attorney may consult with medical experts to establish the cost of future treatment, life care planners to project long-term care needs, and economists to calculate lifetime lost earning capacity. Underestimating these damages early in the process can leave you without compensation for expenses that arise years later when it is too late to reopen your claim.
Send a Demand Letter to the Insurance Company
Your attorney will prepare a formal demand letter outlining the facts of the accident, the evidence proving driver negligence, the full extent of your injuries, and the total amount of compensation you are seeking. This letter officially begins the negotiation process.
The insurance company typically has 30 to 45 days to respond. Their initial response will almost always be a lowball offer significantly below what your claim is actually worth, hoping you will accept out of financial desperation or lack of knowledge about fair compensation amounts.
Negotiate a Settlement
Your attorney will handle all communications with the insurance adjuster, countering their lowball offers with evidence justifying the true value of your claim. This negotiation process can involve multiple rounds of offers and counteroffers.
Many pedestrian accident claims settle during this phase without requiring a lawsuit. However, your attorney should be prepared to file suit if negotiations stall or the insurance company refuses to make a reasonable offer. The threat of litigation often motivates insurance companies to increase their settlement offers substantially.
File a Lawsuit if Necessary
If the insurance company refuses to offer fair compensation, your attorney will file a personal injury lawsuit in the appropriate Georgia Superior Court. This formal legal action demonstrates you are serious about pursuing full compensation and will take the case to trial if needed.
The lawsuit filing triggers the discovery process, during which both sides exchange evidence, take depositions, and build their cases. Discovery can last several months or longer in complex cases. Even after filing suit, most cases still settle before reaching trial, often during mediation ordered by the court.
Attend Mediation or Trial
Georgia courts typically require mediation before allowing cases to proceed to trial. During mediation, a neutral third party helps both sides negotiate toward a settlement. Mediation is non-binding, meaning you can reject any proposed settlement and proceed to trial if the offer remains inadequate.
If mediation fails and the case goes to trial, a jury will hear evidence from both sides and determine whether the driver was negligent and what amount of compensation you should receive. Trials can last several days or weeks depending on case complexity. While going to trial involves risk, it also provides the opportunity to receive compensation far exceeding what the insurance company offered during settlement negotiations.
What Evidence Strengthens Your Pedestrian Accident Claim
Strong evidence is the foundation of every successful pedestrian accident claim. The more proof you have demonstrating driver negligence and the severity of your injuries, the more difficult it becomes for insurance companies to deny or undervalue your claim.
Police Report – The official accident report documents basic facts, identifies the parties involved, notes traffic violations, and may indicate the officer’s assessment of fault. Obtain a copy as soon as possible after the accident, as this report forms the factual foundation for your claim and can be obtained from the law enforcement agency that responded.
Witness Statements – Independent witnesses who saw the accident happen provide credible third-party accounts that counter driver attempts to shift blame. Get names and contact information immediately at the scene, as witnesses become harder to locate as time passes.
Photographs and Video – Visual evidence showing the accident scene, vehicle damage, crosswalk markings, traffic signals, road conditions, and your injuries creates a clear picture of what happened. Also obtain surveillance footage from nearby businesses, traffic cameras, or dashcam recordings if available before this evidence is deleted or recorded over.
Medical Records – Complete documentation of your diagnosis, treatment, prognosis, and medical expenses proves the severity of your injuries and connects them directly to the accident. This includes emergency room records, hospital admission records, diagnostic imaging results, surgical reports, physical therapy notes, and prescription records.
Cell Phone Records – If the driver was using their phone at the time of impact, their cell phone records showing calls, texts, or data usage during that time period prove distracted driving. Your attorney can subpoena these records if the driver denies phone use.
Accident Reconstruction – For complex cases involving disputed facts, accident reconstruction experts can analyze skid marks, vehicle damage, point of impact, and other physical evidence to determine exactly how the accident occurred and who was at fault.
Traffic Camera Footage – Recordings from red light cameras or city traffic monitoring systems may have captured the accident itself. Your attorney can request this footage before it is automatically deleted, typically within 30 to 90 days.
Expert Medical Testimony – Doctors who treated you or independent medical experts can testify about the nature and severity of your injuries, the necessity of your treatment, and your long-term prognosis. This testimony is particularly important when insurance companies claim your injuries are pre-existing or unrelated to the accident.
What Your Pedestrian Accident Claim Can Recover
Georgia law allows pedestrian accident victims to seek compensation for both economic and non-economic damages when another party’s negligence caused their injuries. Understanding the full range of recoverable damages ensures you do not settle for less than your claim is worth.
Economic Damages
Economic damages compensate you for measurable financial losses resulting from the accident. These damages are typically easier to calculate because they have specific dollar amounts attached to bills, receipts, and pay stubs.
Medical expenses include all costs of treating your injuries from the moment of impact forward. This covers emergency room visits, ambulance transport, hospital stays, surgeries, diagnostic tests like X-rays and MRIs, prescription medications, physical therapy, occupational therapy, assistive devices like wheelchairs or crutches, and home modifications if you suffer permanent disability. Your claim can also recover the cost of future medical treatment you will need based on your doctor’s prognosis.
Lost wages compensate you for income you missed while recovering from injuries and attending medical appointments. If your injuries prevent you from returning to your previous employment or reduce your earning capacity, you can also recover the difference between what you used to earn and what you can now earn. For severe injuries causing permanent disability, your attorney will work with economists to calculate lifetime lost earning capacity.
Non-Economic Damages
Non-economic damages compensate you for subjective losses that do not have specific price tags but significantly impact your quality of life. These damages are real and serious even though they are harder to measure in dollar terms.
Pain and suffering compensation recognizes the physical discomfort you experienced during the accident and throughout your recovery. This includes acute pain from the initial injuries, chronic pain that persists long after treatment, discomfort from medical procedures, and reduced physical capabilities. Georgia law does not cap pain and suffering damages in most injury cases, allowing juries to award amounts they believe are fair based on the evidence.
Emotional distress damages cover psychological injuries like anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, sleep disturbances, and fear of traffic or crossing streets. These mental health impacts are just as real as broken bones and deserve compensation, especially when they prevent you from working or enjoying daily activities.
Additional Damage Categories
Loss of enjoyment of life compensates you when injuries prevent you from participating in hobbies, sports, social activities, or family events you once enjoyed. If you can no longer play with your children, exercise, travel, or engage in activities that brought meaning to your life, you deserve compensation for this loss.
Permanent disability or disfigurement damages recognize that some injuries never fully heal and leave you with lasting physical limitations or visible scars. These damages account for how your injuries will affect your life for years or decades to come.
How Georgia’s Comparative Negligence Rule Affects Your Claim
Georgia follows a modified comparative negligence system under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33, which directly impacts how much compensation you can recover after a pedestrian accident. This rule allows injured parties to recover damages even if they were partially at fault, but with important limitations.
Under this law, your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault as long as you were not more than 49% responsible for the accident. For example, if a jury awards you $100,000 but finds you 20% at fault, you would receive $80,000. However, if you are found 50% or more at fault, you receive nothing regardless of the severity of your injuries.
Insurance companies exploit this rule by attempting to assign as much fault as possible to pedestrians, even when drivers clearly violated traffic laws. Common tactics include claiming the pedestrian was jaywalking, wearing dark clothing, distracted by their phone, or stepped into traffic without looking. Your attorney must counter these arguments with evidence showing the driver had the legal duty and ability to avoid hitting you despite any minor actions on your part.
Common Insurance Company Tactics in Pedestrian Accident Claims
Insurance adjusters are trained to minimize payouts and protect company profits. Understanding their tactics helps you avoid mistakes that could reduce your compensation or destroy your claim entirely.
Quick Settlement Offers – Adjusters often contact victims within hours or days of the accident, offering immediate payment of medical bills or a lump sum settlement. These offers are always far below what your claim is actually worth because the insurance company knows you have not yet discovered the full extent of your injuries or calculated all your damages. Never accept a settlement offer without first consulting an attorney, and never sign any release of liability forms.
Requesting Recorded Statements – Adjusters will ask you to provide a recorded statement describing how the accident happened and your injuries. They use friendly, sympathetic tones to put you at ease while asking questions designed to trap you into damaging admissions. Politely decline to give recorded statements beyond basic facts until you have legal representation. Insurance companies are not entitled to take your statement immediately, and anything you say can be taken out of context to deny your claim.
Claiming Pre-Existing Conditions – Insurance companies dig through your medical history looking for any prior injuries or health conditions they can blame for your current symptoms. Even if you had a prior condition, Georgia law still allows you to recover for the worsening of that condition caused by the accident. Your attorney can work with medical experts to clearly distinguish new injuries from pre-existing conditions.
Surveillance and Social Media Monitoring – Insurance companies hire private investigators to follow claimants and search their social media profiles for any posts, photos, or activities that contradict their claimed injuries. A single photo of you smiling at a family gathering can be misrepresented as proof you are not really in pain. Be cautious about what you post online during the claims process, and adjust your privacy settings to limit what strangers can see.
Delays and Stalling Tactics – Adjusters may drag out the claims process for months, hoping financial pressure will force you to accept a lowball settlement. They request endless documentation, lose paperwork you already submitted, and take weeks to respond to communications. Your attorney can apply pressure and move the process forward by setting firm deadlines and threatening to file suit if the insurance company continues unreasonable delays.
Disputing Medical Treatment – Insurance companies often claim your treatment was unnecessary, excessive, or unrelated to the accident. They hire their own doctors to review your records and produce reports questioning your injuries. Your attorney will counter with testimony from your treating physicians who have actually examined you and understand your medical needs.
When to Hire a Pedestrian Accident Attorney
While Georgia law does not require you to hire an attorney to pursue a personal injury claim, having experienced legal representation dramatically increases both your likelihood of success and the amount of compensation you receive.
Immediately After the Accident – Consulting an attorney within days of your accident protects your rights from the very beginning. Your attorney can communicate with insurance companies on your behalf, preventing you from making statements that could harm your claim. Early involvement also ensures evidence is preserved before it disappears, witnesses are interviewed while memories are fresh, and your medical treatment is properly documented to support your claim.
When Injuries Are Severe – If you suffered broken bones, head trauma, spinal cord damage, internal injuries, or any condition requiring hospitalization or surgery, your claim is too valuable and complex to handle alone. Insurance companies fight hardest against high-value claims, and you need an attorney who understands how to prove the full extent of your damages and counter insurance company tactics.
When Fault Is Disputed – If the driver claims you were at fault or that you somehow caused the accident, you need legal representation immediately. Insurance companies use disputed liability as an excuse to deny claims entirely or reduce payouts dramatically. Your attorney will gather evidence proving the driver’s negligence and counter false accusations about your actions.
When the Insurance Company Denies Your Claim – If your claim is denied or you receive an unreasonably low settlement offer, an attorney can reopen negotiations with stronger evidence and legal arguments. Insurance companies take claims more seriously when attorneys are involved because they know the next step is litigation, which costs them significantly more in legal fees and potential jury awards.
How Much Your Pedestrian Accident Claim May Be Worth
Every pedestrian accident claim is unique, making it impossible to provide exact settlement amounts without evaluating the specific facts of your case. However, understanding the factors that influence claim value helps you recognize whether settlement offers are fair or grossly inadequate.
Injury Severity and Permanence – Claims involving catastrophic injuries like traumatic brain injury, spinal cord damage, amputations, or permanent disability are worth significantly more than claims for broken bones that heal completely. If your injuries will require ongoing treatment or prevent you from working, your claim value increases substantially to account for decades of future losses.
Medical Expenses – Higher medical bills generally correlate with more severe injuries and higher settlement values. Claims with $10,000 in medical expenses typically settle for far less than claims with $250,000 in medical expenses. Future medical costs projected by your doctors are also included in your claim value.
Lost Income and Earning Capacity – If your injuries caused you to miss months of work or left you unable to perform your previous job duties, your lost income significantly increases your claim value. Younger victims with decades of working years ahead often have higher claims because their lost earning capacity extends over a longer time period.
Clear Liability – When evidence strongly proves the driver was at fault and violated traffic laws, your claim is worth more because the insurance company has limited defense options. Cases where the driver was drunk, texting, or ran a red light typically settle for higher amounts than cases with disputed liability.
Insurance Policy Limits – The at-fault driver’s insurance coverage limits sometimes cap how much you can recover without pursuing additional sources like your own underinsured motorist coverage or the driver’s personal assets. Your attorney can identify all available insurance policies and sources of compensation.
Pain and Suffering Multiplier – Insurance companies and attorneys often use multipliers of 1.5 to 5 times your economic damages to estimate pain and suffering compensation. More severe injuries, longer recovery periods, and permanent disabilities justify higher multipliers. Your attorney will argue for the multiplier your case deserves based on the evidence.
The Statute of Limitations for Georgia Pedestrian Accident Claims
Georgia law strictly limits how long you have to file a personal injury lawsuit after a pedestrian accident. Under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33, you typically have two years from the date of the accident to file your lawsuit in court. Missing this deadline means losing your right to compensation forever, regardless of how strong your case might be.
The two-year deadline applies to most pedestrian accident claims, but important exceptions exist. If the at-fault driver fled the scene and you cannot immediately identify them, the statute of limitations may be tolled until you discover their identity. For accidents involving government vehicles or poorly maintained government property, special notice requirements under the Georgia Tort Claims Act may require filing a claim within six months or one year depending on whether the government entity is state or local.
For injured minors under age 18, Georgia law typically extends the statute of limitations until two years after they reach age 18, giving them until their 20th birthday to file suit. However, this extension does not apply if a parent or guardian has already settled the child’s claim. Parents should consult with attorneys before making any decisions about minor children’s injury claims because accepting inadequate settlements can prevent children from recovering fair compensation later when the full impact of their injuries becomes clear.
Frequently Asked Questions About Pedestrian Accident Claims
What should I do immediately after being hit by a car as a pedestrian?
Call 911 to report the accident and request medical attention even if you feel okay because adrenaline can mask serious injuries. Stay at the scene if physically possible and ask witnesses to provide their contact information. Take photographs of the vehicle, accident location, and your visible injuries if you are able. Get the driver’s name, license number, insurance information, and vehicle details. Seek a complete medical examination at the emergency room or urgent care clinic as soon as possible.
Do not apologize or make statements about who was at fault, as these comments can be used against you later even if you were simply being polite. Limit your communication with the driver’s insurance company to basic facts only and consult with a personal injury attorney before giving recorded statements or accepting settlement offers. The steps you take in the first hours and days after your accident significantly impact the strength of your claim and the compensation you ultimately receive.
How long does it take to settle a pedestrian accident claim in Georgia?
Simple pedestrian accident claims with minor injuries and clear liability may settle in three to six months, while complex claims involving severe injuries, disputed fault, or insufficient insurance coverage can take one to two years or longer. The timeline depends heavily on how quickly you reach maximum medical improvement and your doctors can provide a final prognosis for your recovery.
Insurance companies prefer to delay settlements because financial pressure makes victims more likely to accept lowball offers. Your attorney can accelerate the process by gathering strong evidence, sending a well-documented demand letter, and threatening litigation if the insurance company continues unreasonable delays. However, settling too quickly often means accepting less than your claim is truly worth because you have not yet discovered the full extent of your injuries or future medical needs.
Can I still recover compensation if I was partially at fault for the pedestrian accident?
Yes, Georgia’s comparative negligence rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 allows you to recover compensation even if you were partially at fault, as long as you were less than 50% responsible for the accident. Your compensation will be reduced by your percentage of fault, so if you are awarded $100,000 but found 30% at fault, you receive $70,000.
Insurance companies aggressively attempt to assign fault to pedestrians by claiming they jaywalked, failed to look before crossing, wore dark clothing, or were distracted. Your attorney must counter these arguments with evidence showing the driver had the primary legal duty to watch for and avoid hitting pedestrians regardless of minor actions you may have taken. Even if you were not in a crosswalk, drivers are still required to exercise reasonable care to avoid striking pedestrians under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-92.
What if the driver who hit me does not have insurance or left the scene?
If the driver was uninsured or fled the scene, you can pursue compensation through your own uninsured motorist coverage if you carry this optional protection on your auto insurance policy. Uninsured motorist coverage is designed for exactly these situations and will compensate you for injuries caused by drivers who lack insurance or cannot be identified.
Your attorney can also investigate whether any other parties share liability, such as a bar that overserved the driver before a drunk driving accident, a vehicle owner who negligently entrusted their car to an unsafe driver, or a government entity responsible for dangerous road conditions that contributed to the accident. For hit-and-run accidents, report the crash to police immediately and provide any description of the vehicle or driver you can remember, as police may be able to identify the driver through investigation.
How much does it cost to hire a pedestrian accident attorney in Georgia?
Most pedestrian accident attorneys work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no upfront costs and the attorney only gets paid if you win your case. The standard contingency fee is typically 33% to 40% of your settlement or jury award, with higher percentages if the case goes to trial rather than settling.
This fee structure makes legal representation accessible to everyone regardless of their financial situation because you do not need thousands of dollars to hire a qualified attorney. If you do not win your case, you owe nothing. During your free initial consultation, your attorney will explain their fee structure clearly and answer questions about costs before you decide whether to hire them. Never hesitate to seek legal advice because of cost concerns — most attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency so that financial barriers do not prevent injured people from pursuing justice.
What is my pedestrian accident claim worth?
Claim value depends on the severity of your injuries, amount of medical expenses, lost income, degree of permanent disability, strength of evidence proving driver fault, and applicable insurance policy limits. Minor injuries with full recovery might result in settlements of $10,000 to $50,000, while catastrophic injuries causing permanent disability can result in settlements or verdicts exceeding $1 million.
Your attorney will calculate your total damages by adding all economic losses like medical bills and lost wages, then adding non-economic damages for pain and suffering based on injury severity and impact on your quality of life. They will also project future medical costs and lost earning capacity if your injuries have long-term effects. Never accept the insurance company’s first offer, which is almost always far below what your claim is actually worth because adjusters know most unrepresented victims do not understand fair compensation amounts.
Should I give a recorded statement to the insurance company?
No. Politely decline to give a recorded statement to the at-fault driver’s insurance company until you consult with an attorney. Insurance adjusters use recorded statements to trap you into damaging admissions by asking confusing questions, taking your words out of context, or getting you to minimize your injuries before you know their full extent.
You are required to cooperate with your own insurance company under the terms of your policy, but even then, consult an attorney first about what you should and should not say. Any statement you give can be used against you later to deny your claim or reduce the settlement amount. Let your attorney handle communications with insurance companies so your rights are protected from the beginning.
What if my injuries did not appear until days after the pedestrian accident?
Seek medical attention immediately once symptoms appear and inform the doctor that your symptoms began after a recent pedestrian accident. Many serious injuries like internal bleeding, brain trauma, or spinal damage have delayed symptoms that do not show up until hours or days after impact. Document when symptoms began and how they have progressed.
Georgia law allows you to pursue compensation for delayed injury symptoms as long as you can prove they resulted from the accident. However, waiting too long to seek treatment makes it harder to establish this connection because insurance companies will argue your symptoms are unrelated to the accident. This is another reason why you should always seek a complete medical examination immediately after any pedestrian accident even if you feel fine at the scene.
Conclusion
Pursuing a pedestrian accident claim in Georgia requires understanding your legal rights, gathering strong evidence, accurately calculating all damages, and effectively negotiating with insurance companies that prioritize their profits over your recovery. The process can be complex and overwhelming when you are dealing with serious injuries, mounting medical bills, and lost income.
Do not face this challenge alone. Contact Wetherington Law Firm at (404) 888-4444 for a free consultation with experienced pedestrian accident attorneys who will evaluate your case, explain your options, and fight for the full compensation you deserve. The sooner you act, the stronger your claim will be and the better your chances of securing the financial recovery you need to rebuild your life after a devastating pedestrian accident.