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Hit by a Truck on I-85? Spartanburg Sits on the Southeast's Freight Spine.
I-85 between Atlanta and Charlotte is one of the heaviest freight corridors in the country, and Spartanburg County is its South Carolina midpoint.
BMW's largest plant in the world ships from Greer, Michelin runs plants across the Upstate, and Inland Port Greer moved a record 205,000 rail containers last year, every one of them touching a truck.
When that freight economy injures you, the case is bigger than the driver who hit you.
Spartanburg County has repeatedly posted the highest traffic-death counts in South Carolina, leading the state in 2023 and again in 2025.
Our trial lawyers handle serious truck injury claims across the Upstate, from Greer and Duncan to Gaffney.
Call (888) 713-6653 for a free review of your Spartanburg truck crash claim. You Win or It's Free.
- The Atlanta-Charlotte freight corridor puts constant heavy truck traffic through Spartanburg County
- Automotive supply chains add brokers, shippers, and logistics firms to the defendant list
- Truck electronic data proves these cases and disappears fastest
- Free case review 24/7, and no fee unless we win
Where the Upstate's Truck Crashes Happen
The $480 million rebuild of I-85 between mile markers 77 and 98 wrapped up its widening through Spartanburg and Cherokee counties in 2025, but the stretch southwest toward Greenville, exits 40 through 69, will not see its added lane until a project now pushed to 2030. That gap is where six lanes of freight compress into four, and compression is where trucks hit cars.
Off the interstate, the plant corridors carry the risk. SC-101 runs past BMW's front gate, SC-290 threads the Duncan and Greer industrial belt, and both mix shift-change commuter pulses with tractor-trailers on surface-road geometry: signalized intersections, left turns across traffic, and no forgiveness for a 40-ton vehicle that misjudges either. US-29 and the business routes collect what the interstate spills during every wreck-driven detour.
Five Upstate Truck Crash Patterns, and What Each One Proves
The Congestion Rear-End
Traffic slows in the exit 40-69 bottleneck or at an interchange backup, and an 80,000-pound rig does not. Following distance and speed live in the truck's engine data, and stopping-distance physics make the defense's "sudden stop" story a math problem we can usually win.
The Night Underride
A car meets a trailer crossing or backing where lighting and conspicuity failed. These are catastrophic-injury cases that turn on equipment compliance: reflective tape, underride guards, and lighting rules the carrier either met or did not.
The Shift-Change Merge on SC-101
Plant traffic surges onto the corridor as freight moves through it. Gap judgment, signal timing, and witness accounts decide fault, and the witnesses are commuters who scatter to the next shift unless someone finds them fast.
The Container Move From Inland Port Greer
Rail containers transfer to chassis and roll to the plants and warehouses on short-haul schedules. Overweight boxes, chassis defects, and hours stacked across port queues and highway legs put liability on companies that never touched the steering wheel.
The Work-Zone Sideswipe
Years of I-85 construction taught Upstate drivers what shifting barrels do to lane discipline. Work-zone truck crashes add contractor defendants and traffic-control-plan evidence to the usual carrier file.
Who Answers for an Upstate Truck Crash
Just-in-time manufacturing runs on deadlines, and deadlines roll downhill onto drivers. The company whose name is on the trailer is rarely the only responsible party: a motor carrier employs or leases the driver, a broker arranged the load, a shipper set the window, a maintenance contractor signed off the brakes, and each of them carries insurance the claim should reach. Federal law requires interstate carriers to hold at least $750,000 in liability coverage, and serious cases routinely involve excess layers above it.[1]
South Carolina's apportionment rules, rewritten effective 2026, make the defendant map decisive: a defendant under 50 percent at fault pays only its own share, so every company left off the caption is money left out of the recovery. The mechanics are covered on our South Carolina comparative negligence and apportionment page.
The proof lives in records the industry keeps and deletes on schedule: electronic driving logs, engine and telematics downloads, dispatch and load documents, driver qualification files, and inspection histories. Preservation letters in the first week decide what exists by the first deposition.
The Injuries an 80,000-Pound Vehicle Leaves Behind
Truck-versus-car physics do not produce minor cases. Spartanburg's serious truck crashes cause traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage and paralysis, crush and amputation injuries, severe burns from fuel fires, and deaths that turn injury claims into wrongful death and survival actions. Spartanburg Regional's trauma teams see the immediate aftermath; the claims must account for everything after: surgeries, rehabilitation, home modification, lost careers, and the care a family provides without ever sending a bill.
Valuing that honestly means projecting forward, not adding up receipts. Lifetime medical projections and vocational evidence are standard equipment in our serious truck cases, because the settlement that ignores the next twenty years is not a settlement. It is a discount.
What a Spartanburg County Truck Claim Can Recover
Medical costs past and future, lost income and earning capacity, pain and suffering without a statutory cap, and punitive damages when the evidence shows falsified logs, impaired driving, or a carrier that treated safety rules as suggestions. Commercial coverage makes truck claims worth pursuing at levels car claims cannot reach, and the same coverage buys a defense that fights accordingly.
What these cases actually resolve for, and the factors that separate a six-figure claim from a seven-figure one, is covered honestly in our guide to truck accident settlements in South Carolina.
Why Choose Lawsuit Legal for an I-85 Truck Case
Trucking insurers defend the Upstate corridor with rapid-response teams that reach crash scenes before the wreckage is towed. Meeting that takes a firm built for it.
- Preservation demands within days - Electronic logs, engine data, dispatch records, and camera footage, locked down before retention schedules erase them
- The full defendant map - Carrier, broker, shipper, and equipment owners, each with coverage identified before the first demand
- Federal regulation fluency - Hours-of-service, maintenance, and securement rules that convert a crash into a documented violation case
- A reputation insurers recognize - Carriers price claims by the firm across the table, and ours prepares every serious case for a Seventh Circuit jury at the Spartanburg courthouse
- Contingency terms in writing - Free consultation, fee from the recovery only, and honest answers from the first call
The Deadlines on an Upstate Truck Claim
Three years to file most injury and wrongful death suits, two if a government vehicle or road defect is involved.[2] Trucking evidence expires far sooner: carriers must keep driver logs only six months, camera loops overwrite in days, and a wrecked rig gets repaired or scrapped unless someone demands its preservation. In a corridor this heavy with freight, the week you start is worth more than the year you wait.