Call For A Free Consultation(602) 345-1818
You’re hurt. Bills are stacking up. An adjuster called this morning and was a little too friendly. Now you’re researching attorneys at 11 p.m., and every firm’s website looks the same: same stock photos, same “fight for you” language, same promises. This page is different. It’s the decision framework we wish every injured person had before they hired anyone, written by an Arizona injury lawyer who has watched what actually moves cases and what doesn’t.
You’ll get the law (the parts that actually matter to your settlement), the real difference between a boutique firm and a high-volume one, the questions to ask any attorney you interview, and a clear picture of what happens in the first 30 days after you sign a fee agreement. No filler.
An Arizona injury lawyer represents people hurt by someone else’s negligence: car crashes, truck collisions, motorcycle wrecks, dog bites, slip and falls, construction injuries, wrongful death claims. The work itself is mostly five things:
What a good injury lawyer doesn’t do: promise you a number on day one, charge you upfront, or hand your file to a paralegal you’ll never meet.
Honest answer: not every fender-bender needs a lawyer. If your car has a scratched bumper, you weren’t hurt, and the other driver’s insurance is paying property damage without argument, you can probably handle it yourself.
You should talk to an attorney when any of these are true:
For everything else, a free case review costs you nothing. We’ll tell you honestly if you don’t need us.
This is the part most attorney websites skip. It’s also the part that determines what your case is worth.
Arizona follows a pure comparative negligence rule under A.R.S. § 12-2505. That means your recovery is reduced in proportion to your share of fault, but the statute does not bar recovery at any specific fault threshold. Even if you were assigned 99% of the fault, you can still recover 1% of your damages.
The formula is simple: Total damages × (100% minus your fault percentage) = recovery.
If your damages are $200,000 and the jury (or the adjuster) assigns you 20% of the fault, you take home $160,000. If they push your fault to 40%, you take home $120,000. That $40,000 swing is why insurance adjusters work so hard to inflate the plaintiff’s fault percentage. They’ll point to your speed, your following distance, the fact that you looked at your phone six minutes before the crash, anything. The whole game is moving that percentage.
Countering it takes evidence: scene reconstruction, witness statements, vehicle data, sometimes biomechanical analysis. If you want the full breakdown, here’s Arizona’s comparative negligence rule in more depth.
Under A.R.S. § 12-542, you have 2 years from the date of the injury to file a personal injury lawsuit in Arizona. Miss it, and your case is generally barred, no matter how strong it was.
Two important exceptions:
Here’s a deeper read on Arizona’s two-year statute of limitations and how the exceptions actually play out.
Arizona insurers are required to offer UM and UIM coverage under A.R.S. § 20-259.01, but you can reject it in writing. A lot of people reject it without realizing what they gave up. Pull your declarations page right now. If you have UM/UIM and you were hit by an uninsured or underinsured driver, you have a claim against your own carrier even if the other driver had no insurance.
Arizona’s constitution addresses damages limits in injury and death cases. Article II § 31 of the Arizona Constitution states that no law shall be enacted limiting the amount of damages recovered for causing the death or injury of any person, and Article XVIII § 6 protects the right of action to recover damages for injuries. The practical effect, as Arizona courts have applied these provisions, is that statutory caps on compensatory damages in personal injury and wrongful death cases face serious constitutional headwinds. The exact application to a given category of damages should be confirmed in the context of your specific case.
Use this list when you interview anyone, including us:
We’ve written a more detailed checklist on how to choose the right personal injury lawyer in Arizona if you want to go deeper.
Phoenix has two flavors of personal injury firm. Both can be ethical. Both can recover money. They operate very differently, and the difference matters depending on what kind of case you have.
High-volume firms run on scale. They advertise heavily, sign large numbers of cases, and rely on intake teams, case managers, and standardized workflows to push files toward settlement. For a clean liability case with modest injuries and cooperative insurance, the systematized approach can produce a fine result. The trade-off: you may not speak to an attorney often, and your file moves at the pace of the queue.
Boutique firms like ours carry smaller caseloads on purpose. Jared handles cases personally. You have his direct line. Documents get reviewed by an attorney, not flagged in a queue. The trade-off in the other direction: we’re selective about which cases we take, and we’re not the right fit for someone who wants to file and forget.
Neither model fits every situation. Match the model to your case. If you have a serious injury, disputed liability, a death case, or anything where the value depends on how the story is told, attention matters more than scale.
The standard arrangement in Arizona injury cases is a contingency fee. You pay nothing up front. The attorney’s fee comes out of the recovery only if there is a recovery. The exact percentage and cost terms depend on the written fee agreement, but a common structure is roughly 33% if the case settles before suit is filed, and a higher percentage (often 40%) if suit is filed or the case goes to trial.
Case costs are separate from attorney’s fees. Costs include filing fees, medical record charges, expert witness fees, deposition transcripts, and so on. Most firms advance these costs and recoup them from the settlement. Read the fee agreement carefully. Ask what happens to costs if there is no recovery. Ask whether the fee is calculated on the gross settlement or net of costs (it materially changes your take-home).
Our practice focuses on auto-related and personal injury work in Arizona and New Mexico:
For non-auto injury work, like premises liability or product defects, see our coverage of personal injury cases beyond auto accidents.
A clear picture of what to expect:
Days 1 to 3. Signed fee agreement. We send a letter of representation to every insurance carrier involved, which directs them to communicate through counsel. We open a file, request the crash report, and send preservation letters if there’s any chance of dashcam, surveillance, or commercial vehicle data.
Days 4 to 10. We gather your medical history so far, identify treatment gaps, and refer you to providers if you need ongoing care. We confirm health insurance and any lien issues (Medicare, AHCCCS, ERISA plans).
Days 11 to 20. We pull police body cam if applicable, contact witnesses, request 911 audio, order property damage photos, and start building the liability picture. If there’s a UM/UIM claim brewing, we put your own carrier on notice.
Days 21 to 30. You’re focused on treatment. We’re investigating. We don’t make a demand until you’ve reached maximum medical improvement or we have a clear treatment trajectory, because demanding too early leaves money on the table.
The adjuster’s job is to close your claim cheaply. Yours is to make sure that doesn’t happen.
Arizona recognizes two main categories of compensatory damages in injury cases.
Economic damages are quantifiable financial losses. These include medical bills (past and reasonably expected future), lost wages, lost earning capacity, property damage, and out-of-pocket costs. They’re proven with documents: bills, pay stubs, employer letters, vocational and life-care reports for serious cases. See our deeper coverage of economic damages.
Non-economic damages are subjective losses that don’t come with a receipt: pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, scarring and disfigurement, loss of consortium. There’s no formula a jury is required to use. The amount is what the evidence supports. More on the analysis here: non-economic damages.
In a narrow set of cases involving truly egregious conduct (impaired driving, intentional acts, certain corporate misconduct), punitive damages may also be available. Those require a higher evidentiary standard and aren’t part of every case.
Bad-faith claims. If your own insurer mishandles your claim (unreasonable denial, unreasonable delay, valuation that ignores the evidence), Arizona recognizes a first-party bad-faith cause of action against the insurer. That separate cause of action can change the value of a UM/UIM dispute significantly, because it opens the door to damages beyond the policy limits when the insurer’s conduct warrants it. The doctrine has been developed across several Arizona Supreme Court decisions, and the specific standard that applies turns on the facts of the claim handling.
The statute of limitations on most Arizona personal injury claims is 2 years from the date of injury (A.R.S. § 12-542). But you should hire someone much earlier. Evidence disappears, witnesses move, and the insurance company starts building its file against you on day one. If a government entity is involved, the 180-day notice-of-claim deadline (A.R.S. § 12-821.01) hits long before the 2-year SOL.
You can still recover. Arizona’s pure comparative negligence rule (A.R.S. § 12-2505) reduces your recovery by your percentage of fault but does not bar it at any specific threshold. Even at 99% fault, you can recover 1% of your damages. The insurance company will fight hard on that percentage, which is one of the main reasons to have a lawyer.
Nothing up front. Personal injury work is typically done on a contingency fee, meaning the attorney’s fee comes out of the recovery only if there is a recovery. Exact percentages and how case costs are handled depend on the written fee agreement, which you should read carefully before signing.
Probably not. Most injury cases settle before trial. But the credible threat of trial is what drives fair settlements. If a firm rarely files suit, insurance carriers tend to notice and price offers accordingly.
Economic damages are measurable financial losses (medical bills, lost wages, property damage). Non-economic damages are subjective losses (pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life). Arizona’s Constitution restricts statutory caps on damages in personal injury and wrongful death cases under Article II § 31 and Article XVIII § 6, and the precise scope is a question for the facts of the case.
Generally, no recorded statements and no signed authorizations until you’ve talked to an attorney. You’re typically not legally required to give a statement to the other driver’s insurer, and what you say can and will be used to reduce your settlement.
If you’re researching Arizona injury lawyers, here’s the easiest next step: call us. A case review costs nothing. Jared takes the call (or returns it the same day), and you’ll get a straight read on the factors that will drive your case’s value and what the realistic timeline looks like. If we’re not the right fit, we’ll tell you that too.
We serve clients across the Phoenix metro, including the cities we serve across the Valley, plus statewide Arizona representation and New Mexico cases.
Free case review: (602) 345-1818
Talk to us before talking to insurance: (602) 345-1818
We answer 24/7.
By Jared J. Pehrson | Impact Legal Car Accident Attorneys