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US-19 Accident Injury Claims
Hurt on US Highway 19 in Pinellas or Pasco County?
You were injured on the road that a national study named the deadliest in America, and the deadliest in Florida for people on foot.
More than 150 people have been killed on the Pinellas and Pasco stretches of US-19 since 2020.
The corridor's design produces the same crashes over and over. We know them, and we know how insurers fight them.
Our Florida trial lawyers represent injured drivers, passengers, and pedestrians along the full corridor, from St. Petersburg through Clearwater to New Port Richey and Hudson.
You pay nothing unless we recover for you.
Call (888) 713-6653 for a free review of your US-19 accident claim.
- Representing the injured on Florida's deadliest corridor
- Pedestrian, driver, and wrongful death claims on US-19
- Free consultation 24/7, with no up-front costs ever.

Why US-19 Is Called the Deadliest Road in Florida
A ConsumerAffairs analysis of federal crash data ranked US-19 the most dangerous road in the country, and its Pinellas and Pasco County stretches have recorded more than 150 deaths since 2020.[1]
The number is not an accident of geography. US-19 was built as a high-speed highway, then the Gulf Coast grew up around it. Today it runs through fifty miles of continuous shopping centers, apartment complexes, mobile home parks, and retirement communities while still carrying traffic at highway speeds. People live on one side and buy groceries on the other.
Florida recorded 10,627 pedestrian crashes and 601 pedestrian deaths in 2025, and no single corridor contributes more reliably to those totals than US-19.[2]
The Design Problem: Why the Same Crashes Repeat on US 19
Our files from this corridor tell one story in four patterns.
Seven Lanes Between One Side and the Other
Through most of Pinellas and Pasco, US-19 is six to eight lanes wide including turn lanes. A person crossing on foot needs twenty seconds or more of exposure, and the signalized crossings can sit half a mile apart. The law calls crossing between them jaywalking. The road design calls it the only practical way home from the bus stop.
Highway Speed Through Neighborhoods That Shop and Walk
Posted limits run 45 to 55 miles per hour, and real speeds run higher. At 30 miles per hour a pedestrian usually survives being hit. At 50, they usually do not. The speed differential also drives the corridor's car crashes: traffic moving at highway pace meets vehicles braking for driveways, transit stops, and signals.
A Driveway Every Few Hundred Feet
Strip plazas, gas stations, and medical offices line both sides, each with its own curb cut. Every driveway is a conflict point where a turning vehicle crosses through-traffic or a sidewalk. Left turns across three lanes of oncoming traffic at unsignalized median openings produce the corridor's most violent T-bone collisions.
Bus Stops in the Middle of It
Transit stops sit mid-block along stretches with no nearby crossing, which places transit riders, many of them older residents or workers without cars, into the widest and fastest section of road. The state has begun a years-long, $240 million rebuild of parts of the corridor, but the claims we handle come from the road as it exists today.
"A road built for 1970s traffic is deciding who gets hurt in 2026. The claim has to account for everything the corridor put in motion."
None of this excuses the driver who fails to yield, speeds, or looks at a phone. It means the evidence in a US-19 case, the crash location, the sight lines, the lighting, and the signal timing, has to be documented before the corridor's next repaving erases it.
Hit as a Pedestrian on US-19: How the Claim Actually Works
Florida law gives a pedestrian struck by a car more protection than most people expect, and the insurer will test every inch of it.
PIP follows the person, not the vehicle. If you own a registered vehicle, your own PIP coverage pays your first medical bills even though you were on foot. If you own no vehicle but live with a relative who does, that household policy can apply. Injured pedestrians who assume they have no coverage often walk away from money that was already theirs.
Crossing outside a crosswalk is not a forfeiture. Drivers owe a duty to keep a proper lookout everywhere on the road, and under Florida's crosswalk statute the fault analysis weighs both parties' conduct.[3] Since 2023, the stakes are higher: a pedestrian found more than 50 percent at fault recovers nothing. That is precisely the number the insurer tries to reach when the crossing was mid-block, which makes the corridor evidence, distance to the nearest signal, lighting, the driver's speed and phone records, the whole case.
Serious injuries clear the threshold. A pedestrian hit at US-19 speeds almost always suffers injuries that satisfy the permanency threshold for pain and suffering damages. The medical record has to prove it, which is one more reason treatment cannot wait.
Our Florida pedestrian accident lawyers handle these cases across the state, and no corridor produces more of them than this one.
Driver and Passenger Injury Claims on the Corridor
The same design that kills pedestrians injures drivers. The claims we see most from US-19:
- Left-cross T-bones at unsignalized median openings, where a turning driver misjudges a gap in 50-mile-per-hour traffic.
- Rear-end collisions where through-traffic meets a vehicle braking for a driveway, a bus, or a signal that has been green for a mile.
- Driveway pull-out crashes from the hundreds of curb cuts, often involving older drivers making sighting errors across multiple lanes.
- U-turn and median crashes where the corridor's long distances between signals push drivers into risky turns.
- Motorcycle and bicycle strikes, where the injuries are catastrophic at corridor speeds.
Every one of these becomes a fault argument under Florida's 51 percent bar, and the physical evidence usually answers it. Skid marks, crush profiles, and camera angles from the businesses lining the road tell the story if they are preserved in time.
What a US-19 Injury Claim Can Recover
Florida places no cap on compensatory damages in a negligence case. A corridor injury claim can include:
- Medical expenses, past and future, beyond what PIP paid.
- Lost income and lost earning capacity.
- Pain and suffering, once permanency is established, with no statutory ceiling.
- Scarring, disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life.
- Punitive damages against drunk or reckless drivers.
- Wrongful death damages for the families the corridor has taken the most from.
Value turns on the injury, the coverage, and the fault fight. Pedestrian cases on this road are frequently catastrophic-injury or death cases, and they deserve to be built that way from the first week.
The Two-Year Deadline, and the Evidence That Will Not Wait for It
Most Florida negligence claims must be filed within two years under § 95.11.[4] On US-19 the real clock is shorter. Business surveillance systems overwrite in days. Skid marks fade with the next rain. The corridor is under active reconstruction, and the intersection where you were hit may look different in six months. Preservation is the first legal act in a US-19 case, and it should happen the same week as the crash.