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Knoxville Personal Injury Lawyers Serving Knox County and East Tennessee
Hurt in Knox County because someone else was careless?
Our Tennessee trial lawyers build serious injury and wrongful death claims for people hurt across Knoxville, Knox County, and the surrounding East Tennessee counties.
Tennessee gives you one year from the date of injury to file, one of the shortest deadlines in the country, and the clock does not stop while you recover.
Knoxville recorded 52 traffic deaths in 2024, a 14 percent jump from 45 the year before, and riders and pedestrians accounted for nearly half of them.
A serious injury claim is a fight over what your losses are worth, and Tennessee's 49 percent fault bar means a single percentage point can be the difference between recovering in full and recovering nothing.
We investigate the crash, document the full cost of the harm, and put the responsible party's insurer in front of a number it has to answer for.
Call (888) 713-6653 for a free case review, available 24/7.
Knoxville Injury Claims at a Glance
- Tennessee trial lawyers serving Knoxville, Knox County, and East Tennessee
- One year to file under T.C.A. § 28-3-104, among the shortest deadlines in the nation
- Recovery shrinks with your share of fault and disappears once it reaches 50 percent
- Serious injury, wrongful death, and every negligence claim in between
- Free case review 24/7. No fee unless we win.

What Makes Knoxville's Roads So Dangerous for Riders and Pedestrians
Knoxville sits where Interstate 40 and Interstate 75 run together, and that overlap carries the heaviest traffic on I-40's entire path across Tennessee, roughly 218,583 vehicles a day as of 2022. Freight bound for the whole Southeast shares those lanes with people driving to work.
Locals have called the downtown interchange Malfunction Junction since the 1970s, when the merging freight and commuter volume outgrew the road that carried it. The rebuild that followed pulled one leg out of the tangle and turned it into what drivers now know as I-275.
Alcoa Highway tells the same story in a different form. The corridor connecting Knoxville to McGhee Tyson Airport ranked eighth of thirty-four major regional arterials for fatal and serious-injury crashes in the Knoxville Transportation Planning Organization's review, and the state is spending 183 million dollars on a seven-phase reconstruction, running from 2023 into 2027, to convert it to controlled access.[1] Roads do not get rebuilt at that cost because they are safe.
The people who pay for that road geometry are not always the ones in the heaviest vehicles. Of the 52 people killed on Knoxville streets in 2024, twelve were motorcyclists and eleven were pedestrians, so riders and people on foot made up nearly half of the city's traffic deaths. When vulnerable road users die that far out of proportion, the injuries that stop short of death are catastrophic ones: brain trauma, spinal damage, crushed limbs, the harm that reshapes a life instead of ending it.
That is the environment your claim has to account for, which is why a real investigation starts with the road and the vehicles as much as the driver.
Knoxville sits where I-40 and I-75 carry the heaviest freight traffic in the state, and in 2024 more than a third of the people killed on its streets were on a motorcycle or on foot. Heavy trucks and exposed road users: that mix is the East Tennessee case in one sentence. Some cases begin with a rear-end collision. Others involve a tractor-trailer, a pedestrian, a motorcyclist, or a fatal crash. Different challenges. Serious injury litigation takes many forms, but every case deserves experienced legal representation built to pursue its full value.
Knoxville's Fatal Crashes in 2024
The Knoxville Police Department's year-end count shows where the metro loses people:
- 52 people killed on Knoxville streets, up 14 percent from 45 in 2023
- 12 motorcyclists, 11 pedestrians, and 1 bicyclist among the dead[2]
- 16 fatal crashes on the interstates, which produced 20 of the deaths
- Vulnerable road users made up close to half of the toll
No verified Knox County-wide crash total is published, so anyone quoting one is guessing. What the city numbers make clear is that motorcycle and pedestrian cases are not a footnote here. They are a large share of the most serious injuries our Tennessee lawyers see out of Knoxville.
The Injury Cases Our Knox County Attorneys Take On
East Tennessee produces the full range of negligence claims, and we handle the full range in response. Each of these is a different kind of case, with a different defendant and a different evidence trail.
Car and Highway Crashes
Rear-end chain reactions on I-40, T-bone collisions at surface intersections, and single-vehicle wrecks on the mountain roads south of the river all send people to UT Medical Center's trauma center. Our Knoxville car accident lawyers handle the injury claims and the fight over fault that follows every one of them.
Truck and Freight Collisions
The I-40 and I-75 overlap is a cross-country freight route, and a loaded tractor-trailer transfers force a passenger vehicle was never built to absorb. Our Knoxville truck accident lawyers pursue the driver, the motor carrier, and every insurer standing behind the freight.
Motorcycle Injuries
Twelve of Knoxville's 2024 traffic deaths were riders, and a motorcycle case has to answer the bias that a rider was somehow asking for it. Tennessee requires a helmet on every operator and passenger of any age under T.C.A. § 55-9-302, and our Tennessee motorcycle accident lawyers build the record that puts fault where it belongs.
Pedestrian and Bicycle Injuries
Eleven pedestrians and one bicyclist were killed on Knoxville streets in 2024. A person on foot has nothing between them and the vehicle, so these crashes produce the head and internal injuries that need lifelong care, and the claim turns on the driver's duty to see what was in front of them.
Premises Liability and Unsafe Property
Falls on unmaintained stairs, injuries in poorly lit garages, and assaults a property owner should have guarded against are all compensable when the owner ignored a hazard it was responsible for. Our Tennessee premises liability lawyers handle those claims against the business or landlord that let the danger stand.
Medical Malpractice and Nursing Home Neglect
A missed diagnosis, a surgical error, or a neglected nursing home resident is an injury inflicted by the people trusted to provide care. We litigate Tennessee medical malpractice claims and pursue nursing home abuse cases under the procedural rules that govern health care claims in this state.
Wrongful Death
When negligence takes a life, our Tennessee wrongful death lawyers represent the family the statute names. The deadline carries a trap worth knowing early: the one-year clock runs from the date of the injury, not the date of the death.
What Is a Knox County Injury Claim Worth?
Whatever the evidence proves your losses are worth. There is no single average, because the number is built from your own medical bills, your lost income, and the lasting impact the injury leaves behind. A full Knoxville injury claim accounts for:
- Medical costs, past and future: the trauma care, the surgeries, the rehabilitation, and the treatment your doctors say still lies ahead
- Lost income and earning capacity: the paychecks already gone and the career the injury cut short or closed off
- Pain, suffering, and loss of enjoyment: the human cost that no receipt measures but a jury can
- Punitive damages: available in Tennessee against a drunk driver or conduct that went past carelessness into recklessness
Three Tennessee rules move that number more than anything a brochure will tell you. The first is the 49 percent fault bar. Under McIntyre v. Balentine, your recovery drops by your share of fault, and once the defense pins 50 percent or more on you, it drops to zero.[3] Every percentage point the adjuster argues is money, which is exactly why our breakdown of Tennessee comparative fault matters to how a file gets built.
The second is the cap on non-economic damages. Tennessee limits pain and suffering to 750,000 dollars in most cases, and 1,000,000 dollars for catastrophic loss like paralysis or the amputation of two limbs, under T.C.A. § 29-39-102.[4] The cap has a trapdoor: it falls away entirely when the defendant was intoxicated to the point that judgment was impaired. Our page on Tennessee's damage caps walks through when the ceiling applies and when it lifts.
The third is coverage. Tennessee requires just 25,000 dollars in liability coverage, and 21.3 percent of the state's drivers carry none at all, the fifth-highest uninsured rate in the country. Your own uninsured motorist coverage is often the recovery, and Tennessee insurers must include it in every auto policy unless you rejected it in writing under T.C.A. § 56-7-1201.
Don Worley is known as "the Lawyer Lawyers Call When Cases Get Complicated."
Tennessee's One-Year Deadline and the Knox County Court That Hears Your Case
You have one year from the date of the injury to file, under T.C.A. § 28-3-104, and Tennessee's filing clock is shorter than almost every other state's.[5] Miss it and the strongest case in Knox County is worth nothing, because the court never reaches the merits.
One narrow extension exists. When the person who hurt you is criminally charged within that first year, T.C.A. § 28-3-104(a)(2) can push your deadline against that person to two years. It is not a safety net to count on: it protects only the claim against the party actually prosecuted, and the conditions are strict. Treat every Tennessee injury claim as a one-year case and let a lawyer tell you if more time exists.
A Knoxville injury case is filed in the Circuit Court for the Sixth Judicial District, in the City-County Building at 400 Main Street.[6] Circuit Court is where Tennessee personal injury claims belong, because the Chancery Court cannot hear unliquidated tort damages. If your crash happened in a bordering county, venue and the jury pool shift with it, and that choice is part of the strategy. Our guide to the Tennessee court system lays out how the districts and deadlines fit together.
Because the clock is short, the work starts immediately. The record that wins a Knoxville case is built in the first weeks, before the evidence that decides fault is gone.
Evidence That Disappears in the First Week
Tennessee's one-year deadline compresses everything, and the proof that decides fault does not wait. In the days after a serious Knox County injury, this is what has to be locked down:
- Crash and incident reports from Knoxville PD, the Knox County Sheriff, or the Tennessee Highway Patrol
- Traffic and business camera footage from I-40, I-75, and commercial corridors, which overwrites in days
- Vehicle black-box data capturing speed and braking in the seconds before impact
- The scene itself, before skid marks fade and a damaged property gets repaired
- Medical records that start early, because every gap in treatment becomes an argument that you were not badly hurt
A preservation demand has to reach the people holding this evidence before it cycles out. That is the first thing an attorney does, and it is the reason waiting costs cases.
Why Injured Knox County Families Choose Lawsuit Legal
East Tennessee has no shortage of injury firms advertising on billboards along Kingston Pike. Here is what separates ours.
- A record insurers can look up. Our attorneys have handled more than 40,000 injury cases and recover for 98 of every 100 clients we take on. Carriers price a demand differently when the firm behind it is known for finishing.
- Led by a lawyer other lawyers call. Cases run under Don Worley, a personal injury attorney with more than 20 years of experience and a caseload built on the complicated files other firms send out the door.
- Selective on purpose. We are not a settlement mill. We take the cases we believe in, and if you do not need a lawyer, we tell you so in the first conversation.
- We come to you. Hospital and home visits for clients who cannot travel, across Knox County and the surrounding area.
- No fee unless we win. Free consultations 24/7, and no fee of any kind unless we recover for you.
Choose the firm built for the courtroom, not the call center.