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Compensation for Houston Pedestrian Accidents
Houston Pedestrian Accident Lawyers
A person on foot has nothing between them and a vehicle, so a pedestrian struck in Houston is far more likely to be killed or catastrophically hurt than anyone inside a car.
And almost every pedestrian claim opens with the same move from the other side: blame the person who was walking.
Winning these cases means answering that blame with the crosswalk law and the physical evidence of what the driver actually did.
Lawsuit Legal works from our Houston office and represents people hit while walking across the city's wide arterials, intersections, parking lots, and neighborhoods.
Our Texas cases are led by personal injury attorney Don Worley, licensed by the State Bar of Texas, with more than 40,000 cases handled and over $100 million recovered for injury victims.
We move quickly to secure the camera footage and witness accounts that fix what happened before the driver's version sets in.
When the insurer will not pay what a claim is worth, our trial-ready attorneys are prepared to take it to a Harris County jury.
Call (888) 713-6653 for a free, confidential review of your pedestrian accident claim. You Win or It's Free.
- $100+ million recovered w/ 98% recovery rate
- Blame-the-pedestrian defense answered with the crosswalk law and the evidence
- Free Legal Evaluation - You Pay Nothing Unless We Win

Houston Is One of the Most Dangerous Places to Walk
Houston and Texas rank among the deadliest places in the country for people on foot, and pedestrian deaths have climbed in recent years.[1] The reasons are built into the city itself.
- Wide, fast arterials designed to move cars quickly, where a person crossing has to cover many lanes of high-speed traffic.
- Long gaps between signals and crosswalks, which leave people crossing where the road never planned for them.
- Missing or broken sidewalks that push people into the roadway.
- Poor lighting on many streets, which hides pedestrians until it is too late.
- Freeway frontage roads where high speeds meet driveways, bus stops, and people on foot.
The danger is worst on the city's wide commercial corridors and the freeway frontage roads along I-45, I-10, and US-59, where fast traffic, many lanes, and long distances between safe crossings sit right next to the bus stops, storefronts, and apartments people reach on foot every day.
None of this is the fault of the person walking. The conditions raise the risk, but a pedestrian is hurt because a driver failed to yield, failed to look, or was going too fast to stop, and that is where responsibility lies.
How Houston Pedestrian Crashes Happen
Most serious pedestrian crashes come down to a driver who did not yield or did not see a person who was plainly there to be seen.
- Failure to yield at crosswalks, where a driver does not stop for a person who has the right of way.
- Turning vehicles, when a driver turning left or right across a crosswalk strikes someone lawfully crossing.
- Distracted and drunk drivers, whose delayed reactions are lethal to a person on foot.
- Backing and parking-lot crashes, where a driver reverses or pulls out into someone walking.
- Dark and unlit roads, where speed and poor visibility combine, especially on arterials and frontage roads.
- Hit-and-run, when a driver flees, leaving the injured person and the question of coverage behind.
In nearly all of these, the driver had a duty to watch for and yield to people on foot. The failure to do so, not the act of walking, is what caused the harm.
The Blame-the-Pedestrian Defense
Nearly every pedestrian case features the same defense: the person darted out, was not in a crosswalk, or was somehow at fault for being there. It is the pedestrian version of the rider bias, and it is meant to shift responsibility off the driver.
Texas law gives a real answer to it. A driver must yield to a pedestrian lawfully within a crosswalk, and must exercise due care to avoid hitting any person on the road, sounding the horn when needed.[2] Pedestrians have duties too, but a driver's duty to look and yield does not disappear because someone was crossing mid-block.
The reason the blame matters is comparative fault. Texas reduces a recovery by the injured person's share of fault and bars it entirely at 51 percent, so the insurer pushes as much fault onto the pedestrian as it can.[3] We answer it with the crosswalk law, the sight lines, the driver's speed, and the camera footage, which usually tell a far different story than the driver's first account.
Being hurt on a dangerous street does not make it your fault. A driver who failed to look does not get to borrow the road's bad reputation. What the driver did, and what the camera saw, matters.
Being on foot does not make a crash your fault, and being hit on a dangerous street does not give the driver a free pass. The fact that you were walking is not a defense to hitting you.
Severe Injuries and What the Claim Recovers
A person struck by a vehicle absorbs the full force of the impact, often twice, once from the vehicle and again from the ground, so pedestrian injuries are among the most severe in any crash. Texas does not cap the everyday damages in an injury case.
- Traumatic brain injuries, from the impact and the fall, covered in our brain injury work.
- Spinal cord injuries and paralysis, with lifetime care needs.
- Multiple fractures and crush injuries, to the legs, pelvis, and hips.
- Internal organ damage, which can be life-threatening and is not always obvious at first.
- Fatal injuries, which give the family a wrongful death and survival claim.
The recovery has to cover past and future medical care, full lost earnings and earning capacity, pain and suffering, disfigurement, and the lifetime cost of a catastrophic injury. Because the injuries are so severe, an early offer almost always falls short of what the harm will actually cost over a lifetime.
The Cost of a Pedestrian Injury Over a Lifetime
A severe pedestrian injury is not a one-time expense. It follows the injured person for years, and the full cost is far larger than the bills that have arrived by the time an insurer makes its first offer.
- Future medical care, including additional surgery, rehabilitation, medication, and the equipment a permanent injury requires.
- Home and vehicle modifications and, in serious cases, attendant care for daily living.
- Lost earning capacity, when an injury ends a career or limits the work a person can do for the rest of their life.
A life-care plan and an economist translate that future into a present-day figure, so the recovery reflects what the injury will actually cost rather than what has been spent so far. An early settlement, built on today's bills alone, almost always leaves the long-term cost on the injured person, which is why the valuation has to come before any agreement. Settling first and adding up the real cost later is exactly the sequence the insurer is counting on.
Who Is Liable, and the Hit-and-Run Problem
The driver who struck you is the starting point, but a pedestrian case can reach further, and one of the hardest situations, a driver who fled, still has a path to recovery.
- The driver, for failing to yield, speeding, or driving while distracted or impaired.
- An employer, when the driver was working, such as a delivery or commercial vehicle.
- A property owner or government entity, in some cases, for a dangerous crossing, a hidden hazard, or missing lighting, though claims against a public entity carry short notice deadlines.
When the driver flees, a hit-and-run does not have to end the claim. Your own uninsured motorist coverage is designed for exactly this situation and can provide a recovery when the at-fault driver is never found or has no insurance. We move fast to identify the driver where possible and to open every coverage that applies. Tracing a commercial driver's employer, or a fleeing driver's vehicle through camera and forensic evidence, can turn what looks like a dead-end claim into a real recovery.
What We Investigate to Prove the Driver Was at Fault
A pedestrian case is won by fixing what happened before the driver's version sets in, and the physical evidence usually tells a clearer story than the first account.
- Camera footage, from traffic signals, businesses, doorbells, and transit vehicles, which can capture the crash itself before it is overwritten.
- The point of impact and throw distance, which often reveal the vehicle's speed and contradict a claim that the person darted out.
- Vehicle data and damage, including a car's event data recorder showing speed and braking.
- The driver's sight lines and the lighting, which establish what the driver could and should have seen.
- Independent witnesses, whose accounts carry real weight against a driver's self-serving story.
A reconstruction expert ties the evidence together. Time and again, the speed shown by the throw distance and the damage tells a different story than the driver's claim that nothing could have been done.
What to Do After a Pedestrian Crash
The evidence that answers the blame-the-pedestrian defense is strongest right after the crash, and much of it is on cameras that overwrite quickly.
- Get medical care and document your injuries, because the most serious harm is often internal and not obvious at the scene.
- Identify cameras nearby, including traffic, business, doorbell, and bus cameras, which can capture the crash before the footage is lost.
- Get witness names, since independent witnesses are powerful against a driver's self-serving account.
- Do not give the driver's insurer a recorded statement or accept a quick offer before you understand your rights.
- Call a Houston pedestrian accident lawyer quickly. Texas generally allows two years to file under Section 16.003, but camera footage and any government-claim notice deadlines run much sooner.[4]