Arizona Injury Claim FAQs
Common causes include distracted driving, speeding, failure to yield, impaired driving, unsafe turns, poor lighting, and drivers failing to watch for people in crosswalks or parking lots.
Arizona follows pure comparative negligence under A.R.S. § 12-2505. A pedestrian may still pursue compensation even if partly at fault, but any recovery is reduced by the assigned percentage of fault.
Pedestrian crashes often cause fractures, head injuries, spinal injuries, internal injuries, soft-tissue injuries, and long-term mobility problems because pedestrians have little protection against vehicles.
The general deadline is two years under A.R.S. § 12-542. If a government vehicle or dangerous public roadway is involved, a notice of claim may be required within 180 days.
Lazzara Law Firm helps injured people across the Phoenix metro evaluate evidence, deadlines, medical records, and insurance issues after serious accidents.
Pedestrian accident claims in Arizona involve catastrophic injuries, complex right-of-way analysis, and frequent disputes about whether the pedestrian was in a crosswalk, on a sidewalk, or crossing mid-block. Documentation of the exact crash location is one of the most important early steps.
Drivers in Arizona must yield to pedestrians in marked crosswalks and in unmarked crosswalks at intersections. Sidewalk crashes, parking lot crashes, and crashes at private driveways have their own right-of-way rules. The applicable rule depends on the specific location and the direction of pedestrian movement.
Pedestrian injuries commonly include traumatic brain injuries, broken bones, internal injuries, and orthopedic damage requiring surgery. Long recovery periods, ongoing rehabilitation, and changes in mobility, employment, and family roles often follow. Documenting the pedestrian life before the crash is part of explaining what was lost.
Insurance issues in pedestrian cases mirror bicycle cases. The driver auto policy is usually the primary source of coverage, with med-pay, uninsured motorist coverage from household policies, and umbrella policies sometimes available.
Use these location and corridor resources to connect the accident location with the right Arizona injury information.