Hit by a Car as a Pedestrian?
When a Pedestrian Is Hit by a Vehicle,
the Injuries Are Rarely Minor.
There is no seatbelt, no airbag, no frame of steel between you and a moving vehicle. When a car, truck, or SUV strikes a person on foot, the human body absorbs all of it — and the injuries reflect that. Broken bones, traumatic brain injuries, spinal damage, internal trauma. I’ve seen pedestrian accident cases result in some of the most serious and life-altering injuries in my entire practice.
What makes these cases especially important to get right is that drivers — and their insurance companies — frequently try to shift blame onto the pedestrian. They claim you crossed outside the crosswalk, stepped out without warning, or weren’t paying attention. My job is to make sure the facts are established clearly, your medical costs and long-term needs are fully documented, and the driver’s insurer is held to what they actually owe you.
You were walking. Someone driving a vehicle failed to see you, yield to you, or stop for you. That failure has consequences — and those consequences belong to them, not to you.
Common Pedestrian Accident Claims
Crosswalk and Intersection Accidents
Drivers who fail to yield at marked crosswalks, run red lights, or don’t check for pedestrians before turning. These are some of the clearest cases of driver negligence — and the most common.
Distracted and Texting Drivers
A driver looking at their phone for two seconds covers the length of a football field at 55mph. Distracted driving is a leading cause of pedestrian fatalities — and it’s fully preventable.
Backing and Parking Lot Accidents
Drivers reversing without checking mirrors, backing out of spaces into pedestrian pathways — parking lot accidents are surprisingly common and disproportionately affect children and the elderly.
Hit-and-Run Pedestrian Accidents
The driver didn’t stop. You’re on the ground, seriously injured, with no one to hold accountable — or so it seems. UM/UIM coverage and other legal avenues can still provide a path to compensation.
Drunk or Impaired Driver Accidents
DUI pedestrian accidents are among the most severe and legally significant cases we handle. A driver under the influence who strikes a person on foot may face both criminal liability and substantial civil damages — including punitive damages.
Unsafe Sidewalk and Infrastructure Failures
Missing crosswalk signals, inadequate lighting at crossings, design flaws that push pedestrians into traffic — when infrastructure failures contribute to an accident, government entities can also bear responsibility.
7 Steps That Protect Your Claim
Pedestrian accident victims are often too seriously injured to do much in the immediate aftermath — and that’s completely understandable. But in the hours and days that follow, these steps can make a significant difference to your case.
Accept Emergency Medical Help Immediately
Don’t refuse the ambulance. Pedestrian impact injuries — internal bleeding, spinal trauma, skull fractures — can be life-threatening and may not be fully apparent in the first minutes. Let paramedics assess you at the scene, and follow up with a specialist as soon as possible.
Call 911 if You’re Able
A police report documenting the driver’s information, the location, road conditions, and witness accounts is essential. If you’re too injured to do this yourself, ask someone nearby to call on your behalf and stay at the scene until police arrive.
Document the Scene — or Ask Someone to Help You
The vehicle, its position, the road markings, crosswalk signals, skid marks, lighting conditions, and your visible injuries. If you’re unable to do this yourself, ask a bystander, a family member who arrives, or trust that the police photographer captures it — then request the full report.
Get the Driver’s Information
Name, license number, insurance details, vehicle registration, and phone number. If the driver is cooperative, get this directly. If they’re not — or if they fled — the police report will capture what’s available.
Identify Witnesses and Nearby Cameras
Pedestrian accidents often happen at busy intersections or in front of businesses. Note the locations of traffic cameras, business security cameras, and doorbell cameras on nearby homes. Witness accounts and footage can establish exactly where you were and what the driver did.
Don’t Give Statements to the Driver’s Insurance
The driver’s insurance will contact you quickly. They are not calling to help you — they’re gathering information to limit their liability. Decline to give a recorded statement and call us before responding to any insurer.
Keep a Full Record of Every Impact
Medical bills, specialist visits, physical therapy, prescription costs, transportation to appointments, lost wages, and a daily journal of pain, limitations, and how the injury has changed your life. The total picture of your damages goes far beyond the first hospital visit.
Pedestrian Injuries Are Severe.
Your Compensation Needs to Reflect a Full Recovery.
Pedestrian accident victims sustain some of the most severe injuries seen in personal injury law — precisely because there is nothing to absorb the force of impact except the human body. Multiple fractures, traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, internal organ injuries — these often require surgeries, months of rehabilitation, and in serious cases, lifetime care and support.
In states where our firm is licensed — California, Colorado, Florida, Nevada, New York, and Texas — pedestrian accident victims may be entitled to:
- Emergency and ongoing medical expenses
- Surgery, hospitalization, and specialist care
- Physical therapy and long-term rehabilitation
- Lost wages and reduced future earning capacity
- Pain, suffering, and emotional distress
- Permanent disability and loss of quality of life
Every case is different. Let’s sit down — free of charge — and I’ll give you an honest picture of what yours is worth.
Upfront. Always.
No Win, No Fee — Period.
You’re already dealing with enough. Our contingency fee model means we only get paid when you do. There’s no financial risk to getting the legal help you need right now.
Pedestrian Accident FAQ
What if I wasn’t in a crosswalk when I was hit?
The driver claims I stepped out suddenly and they couldn’t stop. What do I do?
Can I file a claim if the driver who hit me fled the scene?
What if the driver was charged criminally — does that affect my civil claim?
Can a government entity be liable if poor road design contributed to the accident?
How long do I have to file a pedestrian accident claim?
Do you handle pedestrian accident cases in my state?
Let’s Talk — Free, No Pressure,
No Obligation.
I know reaching out to an attorney can feel like a big step. It doesn’t have to be. Tell me what happened, and I’ll give you an honest picture of your options — no judgment, no sales pitch, just real guidance.
Available in English and Polish · No fees unless we win
