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Houston, I-45 (Interstate 45), rush hour. You’re jolted, airbags dust your face, horns layer over the silence after impact. Your hands shake as an unknown number flashes—an adjuster already calling. In Texas, the choices you make in the next 10 minutes can steady both your health and your money path. Breathe. We work these crashes every day, from the Katy Freeway (I-10, Interstate 10) to Beltway 8. Here’s how to turn panic into a plan.
First step: safety and simple facts—no blame at the scene. Second: urgent care within 24 hours, even for “minor” pain. Third: hand our Mayday line to every caller so adjusters stop pinging your phone. We can pull and review your police report same day and map your first 72 hours. You don’t have to memorize rules on the shoulder. We’ll walk you through the Texas basics next, in plain English.
So what are those Texas basics we promised? Texas is at-fault with a 51% bar—if you’re 51% or more responsible, you can’t recover; under 51%, your recovery drops by your percentage. Minimum liability is 30/60/25 ($30k per person, $60k per crash, $25k property). PIP (personal injury protection) is included unless rejected in writing; UM/UIM (uninsured/underinsured motorist) is optional. Your first legal duties: stop, render aid, exchange information, and call 911.
If vehicles are drivable and safe, Texas expects you to move them from live lanes to the shoulder or nearby lot. Stick to facts, not blame. Share names, phone numbers, license numbers, plates, and insurance. Ask for the agency, officer name, and badge. When police respond, they file a CR‑3 (Texas Peace Officer’s Crash Report). Since 2017, drivers no longer file the old CR‑2 “Blue Form.”
If no officer comes, still call non‑emergency, exchange information, and create your own record: photos, video, and a short written timeline. Get the incident number if dispatch assigns one. Request the CR‑3 within 7–10 days when available. Texas law cares about documentation, not drama. The sooner you’ve got clean facts on paper, the easier it is to avoid the 51% trap.
You’re juggling calls and flashing lights. This is where small errors snowball in Texas claims—especially under the 51% rule. Scan these to keep control.
Tow yards relocate vehicles within hours, road crews sweep debris, and event data recorders (EDRs, the car’s “black box”) start overwriting after ignition cycles. Nearby businesses loop surveillance in 24–72 hours. Meanwhile, an adjuster calls quickly, fishing for statements. If you wait on medical care, insurers argue a “gap” means you weren’t hurt. The civil deadline to file most injury lawsuits is two years, but the real danger starts in the first two days. Move early.
We lock evidence fast because time isn’t neutral. A tow yard can crush proof when a bumper gets replaced, and an EDR snapshot can disappear after a few starts. Houston, Dallas, Austin—each corridor has cameras we can preserve with spoliation notices (formal do-not-delete letters). Miss the window, and your case becomes a credibility contest. That’s avoidable.
Here’s what usually evaporates within days along I‑10, I‑45, I‑35, and city arterials.
Safety and compliance come first. If you can act without risking anyone, follow these steps to capture the essentials and keep fault debates from drifting.
Step 1: Get to safety and, if drivable, move vehicles off the lane per Texas guidance.
Step 2: Call 911; request police and EMS (emergency medical services); note agency and officer name/badge.
Step 3: Check for injuries; don’t move someone with possible head/neck/back trauma.
Step 4: Exchange info (DL (driver license), insurance, plates); photograph cards instead of hand-copying.
Step 5: Photograph vehicles, lane positions, damage close-ups, VINs (vehicle identification numbers), and road signs.
Step 6: Capture the scene context—traffic signals, construction cones, weather, lighting.
Step 7: Identify witnesses; save names, phones, and a quick voice memo of statements.
Step 8: Note the tow company and destination; keep invoice and yard details.
Step 9: Seek prompt medical evaluation (ER (emergency room)/Urgent Care); describe all symptoms.
Step 10: Notify your insurer promptly without speculating on fault.
A simple checklist keeps you from chasing paperwork later. Start a single folder today and drop each item below into it.
If you’re unsure what to grab first, a quick consult with a car accident lawyer in Houston preserves EDR data and nearby video before it’s gone. Call us early; we’ll handle the requests and deadlines.
You just secured the scene and evidence—now let’s stabilize the medical bills. In Texas, PIP (personal injury protection) is included unless you rejected it in writing; it pays medical and some lost wages, regardless of fault. MedPay (medical payments coverage) pays medical only and often must be reimbursed. UM/UIM (uninsured/underinsured motorist) covers you when the at‑fault driver lacks enough insurance. Liability insurance pays later, after fault is proven.
Use your health insurance; we coordinate subrogation (the plan’s reimbursement claim) for ERISA plans, Medicare, and Medicaid. Texas hospital and EMS liens under Property Code 55 attach to third‑party settlements; we audit and reduce them. Sequence matters: tap PIP first for deductibles and co‑pays, keep treatment in‑network, and preserve UM/UIM rights. Result: steady care now, less cash out of pocket.
Here’s a quick side‑by‑side so you can see what each coverage actually does.
| Coverage | Required in Texas? | What it pays | Typical limits | Key tip |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Injury Protection (PIP) | No; included unless rejected in writing | Medical bills plus a portion of lost wages | $2.5k–$10k, sometimes higher | Use early; no fault needed |
| Medical Payments (MedPay) | No | Medical bills only | $1k–$5k+, policy dependent | Often reimbursable; watch subrogation |
| UM/UIM (uninsured/underinsured motorist) | No | Your injuries when the other driver lacks coverage | Varies; often matches your liability limits | Covers hit‑and‑runs; give prompt notice |
| Liability (BI/PD) — bodily injury/property damage | Yes; 30/60/25 minimum required | Others’ injuries and property damage you cause | $30k/$60k/$25k minimum; higher common | Pays after fault is proven and damages documented |
| Health Insurance | N/A | Ongoing treatment, diagnostics, prescriptions | Plan-specific deductibles and co‑pays | Expect subrogation; stay in‑network when possible |
Not sure which policy pays first? In minutes, our personal injury lawyer can review your coverages, map the payor sequence, and protect your UM/UIM rights. Once care is stable, we’ll help you document the emotional fallout—and prepare you for high‑stakes trucking claims where speed wins.
You heard us say we’d help document the emotional fallout once care is stable. Let’s do that now. PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) can look like nightmares, jolting awake at 2 a.m., flinching at brake lights, avoiding certain routes, or feeling on edge in traffic. Start a simple diary: date, trigger, symptoms, impact on your day. Ask your provider to screen with the PCL‑5 (a short PTSD symptom checklist). Tell them everything, not just the pain. This creates real, usable evidence.
Early counseling referrals in Houston, Austin, and San Antonio are normal—and they help you heal while supporting your claim. Telehealth works too. Track specifics: missed events, miles you detoured to avoid a road, sleep ratings, panic episodes. Example: “3/12—avoided I‑45, added 25 minutes; woke twice, heart racing.” We include mental anguish, therapy costs, and meds in Texas injury claims when treatment is consistent. With your emotional recovery plan moving, we’ll pivot to 18‑wheeler and commercial crashes where speed on evidence matters most.
So why does speed matter even more with 18‑wheelers? Carriers deploy rapid‑response teams within hours to shape the story while you’re still at the ER (emergency room). Seconds matter. We counter fast with FMCSA (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration) rule pulls, ELD (electronic logging device) and ECM “black box” downloads, and HOS (hours‑of‑service) audits. Same‑day spoliation letters (formal do‑not‑delete demands) go to the motor carrier and insurer. On Texas corridors—I‑10 to Port of Houston, I‑35’s USMCA trade route, Dallas LBJ (I‑635), and San Antonio Loop 1604—delay costs proof.
Now, the cast is bigger than a car crash. You may have claims against the driver, the motor carrier, a freight broker, the shipper, the maintenance contractor, and even corporate safety for negligent hiring, training, or supervision. That’s multiple lanes of liability. Example: a fatigued hauler on I‑10 with a broker‑booked load and missed brake inspections—one letter preserves dashcam and bill of lading; another locks the driver qualification file and post‑crash drug/alcohol tests. We chase telematics (GPS/speed) from dispatch apps. Miss it, and testimony replaces data.
Need us to move now? Our team sends same‑day spoliation, coordinates ELD/ECM downloads, and preserves dashcams before they’re overwritten. Start with our 18‑Wheeler Accident action plan and call the Mayday line—we’ll lock evidence today and then share your personalized claim timeline next.
We said we’d share your timeline next. Here it is—your Texas claim roadmap from minute one to the two‑year deadline, with exactly what to do each step.
| Timeframe | Priority actions | Texas notes |
|---|---|---|
| At the scene (minutes 0–30) | Safety, call 911, photos of all angles, collect witness names/phones | Move vehicles if safe; officer files CR‑3 (official crash report) |
| First 24 hours | Emergency room or urgent care, notify your insurer, route adjusters to us | Early care prevents a ‘gap in treatment’ argument |
| Days 2–14 | Follow-up visits, repair estimates, start a symptom and impact diary | Request nearby video; send spoliation letters (do‑not‑delete demands) |
| Days 30–90 | Demand prep, benefits review, approach MMI (maximum medical improvement) | Apply PIP (personal injury protection)/MedPay offsets; hospital and EMS (emergency medical services) liens may attach |
| Up to 2 years from crash | File suit if needed; preserve UM/UIM (uninsured/underinsured) rights with notice | Two‑year limit; TTCA (government claims) notices may be 45–180 days |
Deadlines shift for minors, wrongful death estates, and government defendants under the Texas Tort Claims Act (TTCA). Some cities require notice within 45–180 days. Venue rules vary. Confirm your dates with us.
Those deadlines matter even more when injuries change every day of your life. So how do you protect a lifetime of care? With TBI (traumatic brain injury), spinal cord injuries, severe burns, or amputations, the first 7–14 days set the tone. We line up specialists fast at the Texas Medical Center, UT (University of Texas) Health systems, or Dell Seton, then secure diagnostics—DTI (diffusion tensor imaging) MRI, neuropsych testing, EMG (nerve/muscle study)—to lock causation. Early records drive care and value.
Next, we build the lifetime map: a life care plan (detailed list of future medicals, therapies, equipment, and home modifications) plus a vocational assessment (what work you can still do, if any). Example: a C6 (neck‑level) spinal cord injury may need 8–12 hours/day attendant care, power chair replacements every 5–7 years, and a wheelchair‑van. We quantify lost earning capacity over decades and align with Medicare Secondary Payer (MSP) rules, using structured settlements to protect long‑term benefits.
These cases need a coordinated plan, not guesswork. Talk with our catastrophic injury lawyer
for a focused consult on specialists, life care planning, and benefits protection. If tragedy struck and a loved one was lost, we’ll guide the wrongful death path next.
If tragedy struck and a loved one was lost, what happens next in Texas? The Wrongful Death Act lets the spouse, children, and parents sue for pecuniary loss (lost income and services), mental anguish, and loss of companionship; siblings cannot. Separately, the estate brings a survival claim—the decedent’s own claim for pain, medical bills, and funeral costs. We open probate to appoint a personal representative and coordinate all voices. Meanwhile, freeze evidence: hold the vehicle, and preserve the ECM/EDR (engine data “black box”) before it’s erased.
What about accountability? If evidence shows gross negligence (extreme carelessness), we also pursue exemplary damages meant to punish and deter. We move fast on timelines: most claims have a two‑year limit, and government entities can require notice within 45–180 days. Practically, we gather wage records, tax returns, caregiving proof, and messages/photos that show the relationship—these make losses real to a jury. Example: a spouse and adult child file the wrongful death claim while the estate’s representative carries the survival claim, and we negotiate together to avoid infighting.
If you need steady, local help, speak with a wrongful death lawyer in Houston for a private, no‑cost consult. We’ll protect evidence, handle probate logistics, and guide your family’s next steps.
We protect evidence and guide next steps; on Texas job sites and work zones that starts before cones move. Lane shifts, missing advance‑warning signs, and short tapers turn merges into wrecks. Liability often includes the road contractor, traffic‑control subcontractor, or general contractor—not just a driver. OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) citations and daily logs matter. Hot spots: Houston/Austin growth corridors and Gulf Coast refineries—Baytown, Texas City, Port Arthur—where construction surges and traffic is heavy.
So what should you capture? Photograph every sign, arrow board, and cone line from multiple angles, plus distances to the hazard; keep a copy of the traffic control plan. For job‑site injuries, document harnesses, guardrails, equipment tags, and lockout procedures. We pursue third parties—GCs, subs, and manufacturers—and, if a city or county’s involved, Texas Tort Claims Act (TTCA) notices may run 45–180 days.
Need site‑specific help in Houston? Talk with a construction accident attorney in Houston
; we’ll preserve signage, traffic plans, and OSHA records within 24–48 hours. Then we’ll shift from road work to water, and show what to do after lake and Gulf boating incidents.
We’re shifting from road work to water now—think Lake Conroe, Lake Travis, and Galveston Bay on a holiday weekend. BWI (boating while intoxicated) uses the same 0.08 standard as driving; officers run sobriety, breath, or blood tests. With rentals, livery waivers don’t erase negligence—photograph the contract and who actually operated. Before the crowd disperses, collect witnesses at the marina: dockhands, bartenders, neighboring slips. If anyone’s hurt, start a report to Texas Parks & Wildlife and, offshore, notify the Coast Guard.
Reporting is fast: file with TPWD (Texas Parks & Wildlife Department) within 30 days; within 48 hours for death, disappearance, or serious injury. Call the sheriff or a game warden on lakes; offshore, hail USCG (United States Coast Guard) on Channel 16. Rentals add layers—owner policies, captain‑for‑hire, and credit‑card damage holds—so save the contract and app messages. Grab TX registration numbers, the HIN (hull ID), GPS tracks, and weather screenshots. Marinas often have cameras; ask managers to preserve video now.
Want a clear plan? We handle Texas lake and Gulf cases end‑to‑end. Start with a quick review of your coverage and reporting duties on our boating accidents.
page, then call the Mayday line—one call routes insurers to us.
That one call that routes insurers to us matters even more when the emergency moves from water to air. So what changes in the air? Federal teams arrive fast: NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) investigates, while the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) regulates operations. We preserve maintenance logs, pilot training and medical files, and dispatch records immediately. For flights touching Texas hubs—Bush Intercontinental, Hobby, Dallas/Fort Worth—venue and jurisdiction can shift, especially with out-of-state operators. We manage the federal process while protecting your civil claim.
Key evidence goes stale quickly: ATC (air traffic control) audio can recycle within days, and FDR/CVR (flight and cockpit recorders) require preservation and expert downloads. We also pull weight‑and‑balance sheets, MEL (minimum equipment list) deferrals, and prior squawks (reported defects). Domestic Houston–Denver claims run under Texas law; Houston–Mexico City may trigger the Montreal Convention (an international treaty that sets rules and limits). We coordinate with NTSB investigators without jeopardizing your right to file.
Need focused help now? Talk with our aviation and commercial airline accident attorney
; we’ll preserve ATC audio, maintenance and pilot records, and guide you through NTSB contact within 24 hours.
You just saw why preserving aviation records fast matters; the same speed applies at parks. We pull TDI (Texas Department of Insurance) ride permits, inspection certificates, and maintenance logs within 24–48 hours. At Six Flags Over Texas or Kemah Boardwalk, we request pre‑opening checklists, sensor fault codes, and manufacturer bulletins. Example: a restraint malfunction? We match last torque checks and cycle counts to operator notes.
Operator training matters. We obtain training rosters, written ride procedures, and incident reports; then compare them to CCTV (security camera video), radio traffic, and guest statements. Local fairs and traveling carnivals add risk: temporary setups, wind limits, and nightly tear‑downs. We secure daily pre‑opening inspections, lockout/tagout (power isolation) records, and contractor insurance. Video often overwrites in 24–72 hours, so we send preservation notices day one.
Want a Texas‑specific plan? Start with our page on amusement park injuries, then call the Mayday line so we route all calls and lock records today. Next, we’ll show you the insurer playbook—and the simple scripts that stop lowballs and fishing expeditions.
You asked for those scripts—here they are: the adjuster playbook and how we answer, word for word, without burning bridges. Use them now; call us if the pushback starts.
That repair delay tactic popped up on I‑69/US‑59 near Midtown. Our client took photos from all angles within minutes, including skid marks and the lane merge. We sent a same‑day spoliation letter (formal do‑not‑delete demand) to a gas station; their cameras captured the impact and traffic light timing. He went to urgent care the same evening, then his PCP within 48 hours, which closed any “gap in treatment” argument. The carrier’s first lowball shifted once the video landed. Fast proof changed the tone.
Behind the scenes, we routed all adjuster calls to us, used PIP (personal injury protection) to cover co‑pays and a few missed shifts, and cut the hospital lien under Texas Property Code 55. When we dropped the preserved video and medical timeline, liability stopped being a debate and the offer moved to match the proof. No drama, just sequence and speed. If you want this playbook on your case, we can map it in 15 minutes and take the calls today.
We can map your case in 15 minutes—then we take every adjuster call. Free consult, same-day evidence lock (spoliation letters, EDR (event data recorder) black-box data), and local teams across Houston, Dallas–Fort Worth, Austin, and San Antonio. Call, text, or video—whatever’s easiest. If you’re hurt now, we’ll coordinate care and rental setup within hours and start reducing liens. You focus on healing; we handle insurers.
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