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Does Your Arizona Crash Need a Lawyer?
Some crashes do not, and it costs nothing to say so.
A no-injury fender-bender with cooperative insurance is a claim you can run yourself.
The answer changes when there was an injury, a fault argument, a thin policy, or a commercial vehicle, because those are the files insurers work professionally from day one.
Arizona's rules raise the stakes in a specific way: your damages are uncapped, your recovery survives shared fault, and the fault percentage itself is where the insurer does its quiet damage.
Use the scenarios below to place your crash.
Or skip ahead: call (888) 713-6653 and get the answer for your specific facts, free.
- No injuries, clear fault, damage paid: handle it yourself and keep records
- Injury treatment, disputed fault, or thin coverage: get a free consultation first
- Arizona reduces recovery by your fault share; the assigned percentage is negotiable
- The cases we accept end in a recovery 98% of the time
Crashes You Can Handle Without a Lawyer
"A lawyer who takes a case that did not need one has charged a fee for nothing. The consultation is where you find out which kind you have."
Three honest categories, and what to watch inside each.
The Pure Property-Damage Claim
Nobody hurt, repair estimates documented, insurer paying. Run it yourself. If the property payout stalls, the Arizona Department of Insurance and Financial Institutions takes consumer complaints at no cost. Keep everything in writing.
Checked Out and Symptom-Free
You were examined after the crash and stayed well. With no documented injury there is little a lawyer adds. One warning applies: neck, back, and concussion symptoms can arrive days later, so give it a week or two before signing any release, because a release signed early closes the claim for whatever surfaces after.
Minor Injury, Fair Offer, Fault Conceded
If treatment was brief, the injuries genuinely resolved, and the offer covers the actual bills and lost time, accepting it can be the rational move. Compare the offer to your documented losses, not to a number a website generated.
The Five Signals Your Claim Needs Counsel
1. You treated beyond a check-up. Documented treatment gives the claim real value, and real value gets professionally defended. Valuation questions multiply from here, covered on our Arizona settlement value page, and unrepresented claims answer them in the insurer's favor.
2. The adjuster is talking percentages. Arizona's pure comparative rule means a fault share does not kill your claim, it discounts it, point by point.[1] Adjusters assign percentages generously because each point is money saved. Contesting the number takes evidence work: scene photos, witnesses, camera footage, sometimes reconstruction. That is lawyer work, on a clock.
3. The coverage looks thin. Arizona minimums run 25/50/15, and a real injury outruns $25,000 quickly. The recovery then depends on finding more: your own underinsured motorist coverage, an employer's policy, another liable party. Our Arizona UM/UIM page explains the first and most-missed source.
4. A commercial vehicle, rideshare, or government vehicle was involved. Each brings layered coverage, a professional defense, and its own rules; government defendants require a formal notice of claim within 180 days, one of the shortest routine deadlines in Arizona law, detailed on our suing the government page.
5. The injury is serious or someone died. Lifetime-care cases and wrongful death claims are built with experts against uncapped Arizona damages. No family should run one alone, and no insurer expects them to succeed alone.
The Cost Question, Answered Plainly
Injury representation works on contingency: no money up front, case costs advanced by the firm, and the fee paid as a percentage of the recovery. A claim that recovers nothing costs you nothing.
The honest test is whether counsel adds more than the fee, and the answer tracks the signals above. On documented injury claims, represented files settle differently because the insurer prices the alternative: a firm that will file, litigate, and put the case to a jury Arizona law leaves uncapped. On claims without those features, we say so and point you in the right direction, which costs you a phone call.
Whichever Way You Decide, Decide Early
Arizona gives you two years to file suit, 180 days to notice a government claim, and, for perspective, one year on some other injury claims like dog bites. The evidence runs on a faster calendar than any of them: intersection cameras overwrite in days, vehicles get repaired, and witnesses move.
Early decisions also prevent the two unforced errors that discount claims permanently: the recorded statement given casually in week one, and the release signed before the injury finished declaring itself. The full sequence for protecting a claim is on our Arizona car accident lawyers page.