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Legal Help for a Car Accident in & Around Memphis, TN
Our Memphis car accident lawyers handle injury claims across Shelby County, Tipton County, Fayette County, DeSoto County border cases, and the surrounding Mid-South region.
If you were hurt in a crash, fill out the form for a free case evaluation to find out what your claim may be worth.
Shelby County leads Tennessee in total car accidents most years.
The I-40/I-240 loop, the I-55 bridge crossing into Arkansas, and the freight volume feeding the FedEx World Hub at Memphis International create a crash environment unlike anywhere else in the state.
Tennessee's 49% comparative fault bar means the percentage of blame assigned to you directly reduces your recovery.
That single percentage point is the difference between compensation and walking away empty-handed.
We represent crash victims injured by another driver's negligence in car, truck, motorcycle, rideshare, government vehicle, and other motor vehicle accidents.
Let Lawsuit Legal help you hold the responsible party accountable to secure full & fair compensation for your medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering.
Get a free case evaluation now.
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Common Memphis Car Accident Cases We Handle
"Memphis roads see thousands of crashes every year, leaving countless residents with life-changing injuries."
Our Memphis car accident lawyers handle the following case types across Shelby County and West Tennessee. Our experienced legal team can help with your auto accident claim and will provide strong legal representation to secure a path forward after serious injury:
Freight and Commercial Truck Collisions. Memphis is the logistics capital of the Mid-South. The FedEx World Hub moves more air cargo than any facility in the Western Hemisphere. I-40 and I-55 carry tractor-trailers, tankers, and flatbeds through Shelby County around the clock. Trucking companies carry policies with limits far above Tennessee's $25,000 minimum. When a commercial vehicle is involved, identifying every applicable policy is the first step.
Interstate Pileups on the I-40/I-240 Loop. The I-40/I-240 interchange concentrates merging traffic, lane shifts, and speed differentials into one of the most crash-prone corridors in the state. Multi-vehicle chain reactions during morning and evening commute are routine. Wet conditions on the Mississippi River floodplain make it worse.
DUI Crashes on Beale Street and the Entertainment District. Beale Street, South Main, and the Pinch District generate a consistent volume of alcohol-related crashes, particularly on weekend nights and during Memphis in May, Beale Street Music Festival weekends, and holiday periods. DUI crashes can trigger punitive damages under T.C.A. § 29-39-104 on top of standard compensatory damages.
Pedestrian Crashes. Memphis has some of the highest pedestrian fatality rates in Tennessee. Poplar Avenue, Lamar Avenue, and Summer Avenue carry high-speed traffic through commercial corridors with minimal pedestrian infrastructure. Crosswalk signaling is inconsistent and sidewalk coverage drops off sharply outside the downtown core.
Hit-and-Run. Shelby County sees a disproportionate share of hit-and-run crashes statewide. If the at-fault driver is never identified, your own uninsured motorist coverage under T.C.A. § 56-7-1201 may be your primary path to recovery.
Rear-End Collisions. I-240 during commute hours, Poplar Avenue through Midtown and East Memphis, and the I-55 bridge approach from West Memphis create the stop-and-go conditions that produce the majority of rear-end crashes in Shelby County.
If you've been involved in a serious accident in the Memphis area, it's crucial to consult with experienced personal injury attorneys. Our legal team is eager to hear your story and discuss your case. Let us help make the insurance claim process as easy as possible.
- Top-Rated Tennessee Car Accident Attorneys
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- Attorney for Tanker Truck Accidents
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- Attorneys for Car Accident Fatalities
Advantages of Working with Our Memphis Car Accident Lawyers
Trial readiness. Most car accident cases settle. But the ones that don't are the ones where the insurer calculated that your attorney won't go to court. A firm that files in Shelby County Circuit Court and has tried cases in front of Thirtieth Judicial District juries changes that calculation. Our attorneys are trial-tested.
Knowledge of Tennessee's Laws. One-year statute of limitations for personal injury claims. Twelve months compresses investigation, evidence preservation, medical documentation, policy identification, demand preparation, and settlement negotiation into a window that most states give you two or three years to complete. Your attorney needs to move on day one.
Commercial trucking experience. Memphis is a freight city. FedEx, logistics companies, and interstate trucking carriers operate under federal regulations with insurance structures that are different from standard auto policies. Your attorney should know FMCSA regulations, how to identify all applicable policies, and how to handle multi-party commercial claims.
Contingency Fee Representation. You pay nothing unless your attorney recovers compensation. No upfront costs. No hourly billing. The fee is a percentage of the recovery. Discuss the specific terms during your free consultation.
How Tennessee Law Applies to Your Memphis Car Accident
Tennessee is a modified comparative negligence state with a 49% fault bar. Under this rule, you can only recover if your share of fault is 49% or less. Under T.C.A. § 29-11-103, the percentage of fault assigned to you reduces your recovery. A recovery example on a $400,000 Memphis car accident claim:
- 15% fault reduces your recovery to $340,000
- 30% fault reduces it to $280,000
- 49% fault drops it to $204,000
- 50% fault and you recover zero
You have a one-year deadline to file a lawsuit. T.C.A. § 28-3-104. Wrongful death claims carry the same one-year deadline. If a MATA bus, a Shelby County vehicle, or any government equipment was involved, the Tennessee Governmental Tort Liability Act under T.C.A. § 29-20-305 requires written notice within twelve months. Miss it and your claim is barred.
Tennessee allows your seat belt use as evidence. Under T.C.A. § 55-9-603, the defense can argue your injuries would have been less severe had you been buckled. It does not bar your claim. It reduces your payout. Mississippi and Arkansas, both a bridge away from Memphis, handle seat belt evidence differently. Tennessee's rule is one of the most permissive for defendants in the region.
Texting while driving is a statutory violation. T.C.A. § 55-8-199. If the driver who hit you on I-240 or Poplar Avenue was on their phone, that violation is direct evidence of negligence. Cell phone records matched against the crash timeline establish distraction at the moment of impact.
DUI crashes trigger punitive damages. Under T.C.A. § 29-39-104, the cap is two times compensatory damages or $500,000, whichever is greater. Beale Street and the surrounding entertainment district generate a steady volume of alcohol-related collisions, particularly Thursday through Saturday nights.
Your case files in the county where the crash occurred. Crashes in Shelby County file in the Thirtieth Judicial District. Crashes in Tipton County file in the Twenty-Fifth. Fayette County files in the Twenty-Fifth as well. Our attorneys handle cases across all of these courts and understand the procedural differences between them. Where you were hurt determines where your case is heard.
How Your Injuries Affect the Value of a Memphis Car Accident Claim
The type and severity of your injuries directly determines what your case is worth and how it is litigated. These are the injury profiles our Memphis car accident lawyers see most frequently:
Traumatic Brain Injuries. High-speed crashes on I-40, I-240, and the I-55 bridge produce TBI cases ranging from concussions to severe diffuse axonal injury. Symptoms can be delayed by hours or days. Early imaging at Regional One's trauma center catches what a community ER may miss. TBI claims carry the highest case values but require neurological documentation, cognitive testing, and expert testimony to establish long-term impact.
Spinal Cord and Back Injuries. Herniated discs, compression fractures, and spinal cord damage are common in rear-end collisions and rollover crashes. These injuries often require surgical intervention and extended rehabilitation. The defense will scrutinize treatment gaps aggressively. Consistent documentation from your initial trauma evaluation through every follow-up appointment is what holds the claim together.
Broken Bones and Orthopedic Trauma. Fractures are objectively verifiable on imaging, which makes them easier to prove than soft tissue injuries. But disputes still arise over whether surgery was necessary, whether hardware removal will be required, and whether the fracture will result in permanent limitation. Compound fractures, pelvic fractures, and facial fractures from steering wheel or airbag impact carry the highest valuations.
Soft Tissue Injuries. Whiplash, sprains, strains, and ligament tears from low-to-moderate speed collisions. These injuries are real but hard to prove on imaging, which makes them targets for dispute. Your medical records, physical therapy documentation, and treatment consistency are what prevent the defense from minimizing your claim.
Fatal Injuries and Wrongful Death. Shelby County consistently ranks at or near the top of Tennessee counties for traffic fatalities. Wrongful death claims carry the same one-year filing deadline under T.C.A. § 28-3-104. Surviving family members may recover funeral costs, loss of financial support, loss of companionship, and emotional suffering.
Where Memphis Crash Victims Are Taken and Why It Matters
Regional One Health — Elvis Presley Trauma Center. Regional One is the only Level I trauma center in the Memphis metro and one of four in Tennessee. It serves as the primary destination for serious crash victims across Shelby County, Tipton County, Fayette County, and the northern Mississippi and eastern Arkansas border regions. The Elvis Presley Trauma Center runs 24/7 trauma surgery, neurosurgery, and orthopedic teams staffed to handle the full spectrum of crash injuries from TBI to spinal cord damage to complex pelvic fractures.
If you are in a serious crash on I-40, I-240, I-55, or any major Memphis corridor, first responders will transport you to Regional One. Accept the transport.
Why the trauma center matters to your case. Your initial evaluation at a Level I trauma center creates the foundational medical record that connects your injuries to the collision. The trauma team's imaging, surgical notes, and diagnostic findings establish the baseline before anyone can argue your injuries came from something else. Crash victims who bypass the trauma center and show up at a community ER or urgent care days later give the defense a gap to exploit.
What to expect. You will be triaged by a trauma team, not a general ER physician. Imaging protocols for crash patients include CT scans for internal bleeding, cervical spine assessment, and neurological screening. Injuries that feel minor at the scene — hairline fractures, slow brain bleeds, internal organ contusions — show up on trauma imaging that a community facility may not run.
After discharge. Regional One coordinates referrals to orthopedic specialists, neurologists, and rehabilitation facilities across the Memphis metro. Continuity of care from the trauma center through your follow-up providers creates the unbroken medical timeline your case depends on. Tennessee's failure to mitigate doctrine allows the defense to argue you worsened your own injuries by missing appointments or skipping physical therapy. Every gap in your treatment record becomes a gap in your claim.
For injuries not requiring immediate treatment or hospitalization, see a doctor as soon as possible, preferably within 72 hours after the incident. Even if your injuries are minor, it is critically important to document your condition and rule out any more serious conditions by a medical professional.
Even if you feel okay, some injuries like whiplash, concussions, or internal trauma can appear hours or days later. Waiting too long can weaken your claim and make it harder for your attorney to prove damages.
How Injury Victims Get Paid After a Memphis Car Accident
Recovery after a crash comes from one or more insurance policies, depending on who caused the wreck, what coverage exists, and how severe your injuries are. We help our clients uncover all potentially liable parties based upon the facts in the case. Here is how it typically works:
The at-fault driver's liability policy pays first. Tennessee is an at-fault state. The driver who caused the crash is responsible for your damages through their liability insurance. Tennessee's minimum is $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident. A single night at Regional One's trauma center can exceed that.
When liability coverage is not enough, other policies may apply. Your own underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage kicks in when the at-fault driver's limits do not cover your losses. Your uninsured motorist (UM) coverage applies when the other driver has no insurance at all or flees the scene. Under T.C.A. § 56-7-1201, every Tennessee auto policy must include UM coverage unless you signed a written rejection form. Many Memphis drivers carry this coverage without knowing it.
Stacked policies multiply your available coverage. If your household policy covers multiple vehicles, you may be able to stack your UM/UIM limits across all of them. This can double or triple the coverage available to you without filing a separate lawsuit.
Commercial and employer policies carry higher limits. If the at-fault driver was working at the time of the crash — delivering packages, hauling freight on I-40, driving a company vehicle — the employer's commercial policy may apply. FedEx fleet vehicles, logistics trucks operating out of the Memphis hub, and interstate freight haulers typically carry coverage far above the state minimum. Identifying every applicable commercial policy is one of the first things your attorney should do. Memphis-based logistics and warehouse workers injured during their commute may also have a workers' compensation claim running parallel to their car accident case. These are separate claims with distinct legal process rules. A workers' comp settlement does not prevent you from pursuing a personal injury claim against the at-fault driver, but coordination between the two can impact your total recovery.
Rideshare policies depend on driver status. If an Uber or Lyft driver caused your crash, coverage depends on whether the driver was logged into the app, en route to a pickup, or actively carrying a passenger. Each stage triggers a different policy with different limits.
Umbrella and excess policies provide additional recovery. Some drivers and employers carry umbrella policies that sit on top of their primary coverage. These policies are not always obvious and require investigation to identify.
Your legal team will help expose potentially liable parties, insurance coverage, and sources of recovery before shaping your legal strategy. In a freight-heavy city like Memphis, the difference between a $25,000 minimum policy and a $1 million commercial policy is often the difference between a claim that covers your medical bills and one that does not.
Where Memphis Car Accidents Happen
The I-40/I-240 Loop. The primary ring around Memphis. Merging traffic, commercial freight, and speed differentials produce daily collision volume that leads the state. The I-40/I-240 split east of the city is a persistent crash zone.
The I-55 Mississippi River Bridge. Two-state traffic, commercial trucks crossing between Tennessee and Arkansas, and limited lane width on the older bridge span create a bottleneck that produces rear-end and sideswipe collisions daily. Arkansas-plated drivers involved in crashes on the Tennessee side are subject to Tennessee's comparative fault rules, not Arkansas law. Your attorney must determine which state's insurance minimums and liability framework apply based on where the collision occurred, not where the driver is registered.
Poplar Avenue. The primary east-west commercial corridor through Midtown and East Memphis. High intersection density, turning traffic into shopping centers, and speed changes between commercial and residential zones produce T-bone and rear-end collisions throughout the day.
Lamar Avenue and Summer Avenue. High-speed commercial corridors with heavy truck traffic, minimal pedestrian infrastructure, and inconsistent signal timing. Both rank among the most dangerous surface streets in Shelby County for total crash volume.
Winchester Road and Shelby Drive. South Memphis corridors near the airport and FedEx logistics facilities. Commercial vehicle traffic, shift-change volume, and intersection congestion make these consistent crash producers.
Beale Street and the Entertainment District. Pedestrian density, rideshare pickups and dropoffs, and alcohol-impaired driving combine to generate crashes concentrated between Thursday and Saturday nights.
Memphis Car Accident Statistics
Shelby County leads Tennessee in total crashes and total crash fatalities in most reporting years per TDOSHS data. Memphis sits at the convergence of three interstates, two state borders, and the highest concentration of commercial freight traffic in the state. That combination produces a crash environment that is statistically more dangerous than Nashville, Knoxville, or Chattanooga on a per-capita basis.
Tennessee averaged over 1,100 traffic fatalities per year statewide in recent TDOSHS reporting. Shelby County accounts for a disproportionate share. The I-40/I-240 loop, the I-55 Mississippi River crossing, and the surface streets feeding the FedEx hub generate collision volume driven by commercial trucking unlike anywhere else in the state.
Pedestrian fatalities in Memphis trend above the state average. Poplar Avenue, Lamar Avenue, and Summer Avenue are among the most dangerous corridors for pedestrians in Tennessee. Limited sidewalk infrastructure, inconsistent crosswalk signals, and high-speed commercial traffic through residential-adjacent zones contribute to the problem.
Evidence in a Memphis Car Accident Has a Shelf Life
Every piece of evidence in your case is disappearing from the moment the crash happens. Tennessee's one-year filing deadline makes this worse than in most states. Here is how fast you lose what you need:
- 24 hours. TDOT SmartWay cameras monitoring I-40 and I-240 record on short loops. Some segments overwrite within a day. City of Memphis traffic cameras operate on a separate system with their own retention schedule. Your attorney must request footage from the correct agency before it is gone.
- 72 hours. Your medical window. Every day between the crash and your first visit to Regional One or a local specialist gives the defense a gap to argue your injuries came from something else. Adrenaline masks fractures, internal bleeding, and early-stage brain bleeds. Get evaluated even if you feel fine.
- 7 to 30 days. Business surveillance footage from gas stations, storefronts, and commercial properties along Poplar Avenue, Lamar Avenue, and corridors near the FedEx hub overwrites on a rolling cycle. Once it is gone, it is gone.
- 30 to 60 days. Vehicle black box data can be overwritten or lost if the vehicle is repaired, sold, or scrapped. Speed, braking, throttle position, and steering input in the seconds before impact live on that box. Critical for high-speed crashes on I-240 and the I-55 bridge.
- Ongoing. Cell phone records proving the at-fault driver violated Tennessee's texting ban under T.C.A. § 55-8-199 require a preservation request. Without it, carriers purge detailed usage data on their own schedules. Police reports from Memphis PD or Shelby County Sheriff contain the responding officer's preliminary fault finding, but supplemental reports and witness contact information must be obtained before memories fade and witnesses relocate.
- Treatment gaps are used to diminish your settlement. Tennessee's failure to mitigate doctrine allows the defense to argue you worsened your own injuries by missing physical therapy or skipping follow-ups. Your medical timeline needs to be unbroken from the trauma center through every appointment that follows.
Speak with our car accident attorneys to determine if you have a valid case. Take advantage of the free legal case evaluation to get your questions answered. If we take your case, you pay nothing unless we win financial recovery.
Memphis Crash Injury Claims FAQ
- What should I do immediately after a car accident in Memphis?
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Call 911 and stay at the scene. Document vehicle positions and road conditions with photos. Collect witness contact information. Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance company. Under T.C.A. § 29-11-103, anything you say can be used to shift fault onto you. If your injuries are serious, first responders will transport you to Regional One Health. Do not sign anything from an insurer before speaking with a Memphis car accident lawyer.
- How long do I have to file a car accident lawsuit in Memphis?
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One year from the date of the crash under T.C.A. § 28-3-104. Wrongful death claims carry the same deadline. If a MATA bus or any government vehicle was involved, T.C.A. § 29-20-305 requires written notice within twelve months. Tennessee's deadline is one of the shortest in the country.
- What is the 49% rule and how does it affect my Memphis car accident case?
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Under T.C.A. § 29-11-103, if you are assigned 49% or less fault, your recovery is reduced by that percentage. At 50% or higher, you recover nothing. On a $400,000 Shelby County claim, the difference between 49% fault ($204,000 recovery) and 50% fault (zero) is a single percentage point.
- Can the defense use my seat belt against me in Tennessee?
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Yes. Under T.C.A. § 55-9-603, Tennessee allows evidence that you were not wearing a seat belt to reduce your damages. It does not bar your claim. It reduces your compensation. Mississippi and Arkansas handle this differently.
- What if the other driver's insurance does not cover my injuries?
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Tennessee's minimum liability coverage is only $25,000 per person. If that is not enough, you may recover through your own UM/UIM coverage, stacked household policies, employer or commercial fleet coverage, or umbrella policies. Under T.C.A. § 56-7-1201, every Tennessee auto policy must include UM coverage unless you signed a written rejection.
Contact Us Now for a Free Auto Accident Case Review
Our Memphis car accident lawyers file in the Thirtieth Judicial District and handle injury claims across Shelby County, Tipton County, Fayette County, and the surrounding Mid-South.
We represent people injured in collisions involving cars, commercial trucks, tractor-trailers, FedEx and logistics vehicles, delivery vans, motorcycles, rideshare vehicles, MATA buses, government vehicles, pedestrian strikes, and bicycle crashes.
Our injury lawyers have handled over 40,000 cases and have deep experience securing the settlement you deserve.
Tennessee's one-year deadline, the 49% fault bar, and the commercial trucking exposure unique to Memphis all require an attorney who knows how to apply these laws to Shelby County roads and Shelby County juries.
The consultation is free. You pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you.
Call (888) 713-6653 or contact us online today for your free legal consultation.
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External Resources
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