Albuquerque Personal Injury Lawyer

Last updated: January 2026

If you were hurt in an accident in Albuquerque and someone else caused it, you have a window to act and a set of rules that work in your favor when used right. New Mexico gives you three years to file most personal injury claims (NMSA § 37-1-8). It follows pure comparative negligence, which means an injured person can still recover even if mostly at fault. And there is no general statutory cap on what a jury can award for pain and suffering in a standard personal injury case.

That last sentence is worth more than most billboards.

Our team handles personal injury claims for clients in Albuquerque and across New Mexico, from rear-end collisions on the Big I to slip-and-falls at stores along Coors Boulevard. We work with licensed New Mexico counsel on every New Mexico matter we accept, and we do not pretend every case is a million-dollar case. We tell clients what a claim is actually worth, what it will take to get there, and what the other side is going to do to stop them.

Free case review: (602) 345-1818. Our intake line is based in Phoenix and we take calls from New Mexico clients there; cases requiring court appearances in New Mexico are handled with licensed New Mexico co-counsel.

By Jared J. Pehrson | Impact Legal Car Accident Attorneys

What to do in the first 48 hours after an Albuquerque injury accident

The first two days set the ceiling on what a case can be worth. Here is what matters.

  1. Get medical attention, even if you feel okay. Adrenaline hides injuries. Soft-tissue damage, concussions, and internal bruising often show up 24 to 72 hours later. If there is no medical record from the first 48 hours, the insurance adjuster will argue your injuries came from something else. Go to Presbyterian, UNM Hospital, Lovelace, or an urgent care. Tell them every body part that hurts, not just the worst one.
  2. Report the accident. Call APD for a crash inside city limits, or New Mexico State Police for incidents on I-25, I-40, or other state highways. Get the report number. You will need it.
  3. Photograph everything. Both vehicles, all four sides, license plates, the intersection, skid marks, debris field, traffic signals, weather conditions, and any visible injuries. Phone photos are usually the strongest contemporaneous evidence available, though their evidentiary use later depends on proper authentication.
  4. Get names and numbers for witnesses. Insurance companies discount your version of events. They have a harder time discounting a neutral third party.
  5. Do NOT give a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurance. You are not legally required to. The adjuster will call within 48 hours and sound friendly. Anything you say gets used to reduce your settlement. Politely decline and refer them to your attorney.
  6. Do not post about the accident on social media. Not even “I’m okay, thanks everyone.” Defense counsel will subpoena it later. We have a full breakdown of why social media wrecks injury claims.
  7. Call a personal injury attorney before signing anything. Releases, medical authorizations, property damage settlements: any of these can quietly close out an injury claim if the wrong one gets signed.

How we handle an Albuquerque personal injury claim

When someone contacts us after an Albuquerque accident, here is what happens, in order:

  • We investigate. That means pulling the police report, ordering 911 call audio if it exists, identifying witnesses, requesting traffic camera footage before it gets overwritten (many NMDOT and city cameras overwrite within 30 to 72 hours), and reconstructing the scene when liability is contested.
  • We identify every potentially liable party. Not just the obvious driver. Sometimes an employer, a vehicle owner, a property manager, or a product manufacturer also has exposure on the claim.
  • We calculate full damages. Current medical bills are the floor, not the ceiling. We work with treating physicians and life-care planners on future medical costs, future lost earning capacity, and the long tail of the injury.
  • We handle every call, letter, and form from the insurance companies. The client stops being a customer service rep for the people trying to underpay them.
  • We negotiate the demand. Most cases settle. The ones that get good numbers are the ones where the adjuster knows we are prepared to file suit.
  • For New Mexico matters that require litigation, we work with licensed New Mexico counsel to file and try the case. Bernalillo County District Court is the typical venue for Albuquerque civil matters.

Personal injury cases we handle in Albuquerque

Our team works on a wide range of New Mexico injury matters:

  • Car accidents (including the Big I, I-25, I-40, Coors, Central, Paseo del Norte)
  • Truck and commercial vehicle collisions
  • Motorcycle accidents
  • Uber, Lyft, and rideshare crashes
  • Pedestrian and bicycle accidents
  • Slip, trip, and fall injuries on commercial property
  • Dog bites (New Mexico follows a common-law framework under which an owner can face liability when the animal had known dangerous propensities or the owner was otherwise negligent in handling it)
  • Defective products
  • Premises liability and negligent security
  • Workplace injuries that fall outside workers’ comp
  • Wrongful death claims under New Mexico’s Wrongful Death Act

If you are not sure whether your situation is a personal injury case, call. The intake call is free, and we will tell you straight. For accident-specific car crash issues, see our Albuquerque car accident lawyer page.

Common Albuquerque accident locations

Certain corridors generate a disproportionate share of serious injury claims in Bernalillo County. If a wreck happened on one of these, our team has likely seen something similar:

  • The Big I (I-25 / I-40 interchange). One of the busiest interchanges in the Southwest. High-speed merging, frequent rear-end and sideswipe collisions, and a steady stream of commercial trucks.
  • I-25 north and south of downtown. Rush-hour stop-and-go traffic mixed with through-traffic running at highway speeds is a recipe for rear-end pileups.
  • I-40 east and west. Long-haul truck traffic. When a commercial driver is at fault, the case usually involves multiple insurance policies and federal motor carrier regulations.
  • Coors Boulevard. Wide arterial with frequent left-turn collisions and pedestrian incidents.
  • Central Avenue (old Route 66). High pedestrian volume, frequent DUI-related crashes, and a long history of severe injury collisions through the Nob Hill and downtown stretches.
  • Paseo del Norte. High-speed east-west arterial where merging and lane-change crashes are common.
  • Montaño and Alameda corridors. Increasing traffic volume with limited signal coordination.

Venue matters. Bernalillo County juries handle injury cases differently than juries in Sandoval or Valencia County, and that affects how a claim gets valued and postured.

Proving negligence in New Mexico

Most personal injury cases are built on negligence. To win, a plaintiff has to prove four elements:

  1. Duty. The defendant owed the plaintiff a legal duty of care. Drivers owe other drivers a duty to operate safely. Property owners owe lawful visitors a duty to keep premises reasonably safe.
  2. Breach. The defendant failed to meet that duty. Running a red light is a breach. Leaving a spill unmarked for an hour is a breach.
  3. Causation. The breach actually caused the injury, both factually (“but for” the conduct, the plaintiff would not be hurt) and proximately (the harm was a foreseeable result).
  4. Damages. The plaintiff suffered real, measurable harm. Medical bills, lost income, pain, disability.

All four elements have to be proven. Evidence wins cases: police reports, witness statements, medical records, expert testimony, photographs, video, and increasingly, data from event data recorders (“black boxes”) in modern vehicles.

Damages you can recover under New Mexico law

New Mexico law lets injured plaintiffs recover three categories of damages.

Economic damages

Economic damages are the quantifiable financial losses caused by the injury:

  • Past and future medical expenses
  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity
  • Property damage
  • Rehabilitation, physical therapy, and ongoing care costs
  • Out-of-pocket expenses (mileage, prescriptions, medical equipment)

These are documentable. Bills, pay stubs, expert projections.

Non-economic damages

Non-economic damages cover the human cost of the injury:

  • Pain and suffering
  • Emotional distress
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Disfigurement and scarring
  • Loss of consortium for a spouse

Here is what most people do not realize: New Mexico does not impose a general statutory cap on non-economic damages in standard personal injury cases. The cap people sometimes read about online lives in the New Mexico Medical Malpractice Act (NMSA § 41-5-6) and applies only to qualifying medical malpractice claims. It does not apply to a typical car accident or premises liability case. Separate limits exist for claims against government entities under the Tort Claims Act (covered below). For a deeper look at how juries arrive at pain-and-suffering numbers, see our pain and suffering calculator.

Punitive damages

Punitive damages are not awarded in every case. Under New Mexico law (see Clay v. Ferrellgas, Inc.), a plaintiff has to show the defendant acted with malice, willfulness, recklessness, wantonness, fraud, or bad faith. Drunk driving, hit-and-run, and conduct involving deliberate disregard for safety are the typical fact patterns where punitives become available. The purpose is to punish the defendant and deter similar conduct, separate from compensatory recovery.

What an Albuquerque personal injury claim is worth

Settlement value depends on injury severity, treatment duration, liability clarity, and available insurance. The ranges below are general working figures used in personal injury practice and reflect commonly cited tiers, not predictions about any particular case:

  • Minor soft-tissue injuries (whiplash, sprains, no surgery, full recovery within a few months): roughly $5,000 to $25,000.
  • Moderate injuries (significant soft-tissue, mild concussion, fractures that heal without surgery, several months of treatment, some lost work): roughly $25,000 to $100,000.
  • Severe or surgical injuries (spinal surgery, traumatic brain injury, multiple fractures, permanent impairment, lengthy recovery): $100,000 to $500,000 and up, with seven-figure outcomes possible for catastrophic injuries.

Every claim turns on its own facts. Past results do not predict future outcomes, and any specific number depends on evidence, insurance coverage, and how the case is built.

Two big variables push numbers up or down: the at-fault driver’s policy limits and whether the injured person’s own underinsured motorist coverage applies. Many Albuquerque claims that look like they should be worth more end up constrained by minimum policy limits. New Mexico’s minimum auto liability bodily-injury coverage is $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident, so a multi-claimant crash can hit the per-accident ceiling fast. That is why we always look at every available source of recovery, including UM/UIM, employer coverage, and umbrella policies. For a full walkthrough, see how settlements get calculated in New Mexico.

New Mexico’s pure comparative negligence rule

New Mexico is one of about a dozen states that follow pure comparative negligence (Scott v. Rizzo, NM Supreme Court 1981). What that means in practice: an injured plaintiff can recover damages even when mostly at fault for the accident. The recovery just gets reduced by the percentage of fault.

Worked example. Suppose a jury values total damages at $100,000 and finds the plaintiff 30% at fault for the crash. The plaintiff recovers $70,000. If the jury finds the plaintiff 70% at fault, the plaintiff still recovers $30,000. In most other states (modified comparative jurisdictions), recovery is barred once fault crosses 50% or 51%. New Mexico does not work that way.

This is why insurance adjusters in New Mexico fight so hard on percentage of fault. Every 10% they can pin on the claimant is 10% off the settlement. Common adjuster moves:

  • Arguing the claimant was speeding even with no citation
  • Claiming the claimant was distracted or on a phone
  • Pointing to failure to wear a seatbelt as contributing fault
  • Suggesting there was time to avoid the collision

We push back on every one of these with the police report, witness testimony, and accident reconstruction when warranted. For the full breakdown, see New Mexico’s pure comparative negligence rule.

Who can be held liable

Identifying every potentially liable party is one of the highest-value pieces of early case work. In an Albuquerque personal injury matter, the responsible parties can include:

  • The at-fault driver in a vehicle collision.
  • The vehicle owner, if different from the driver, under negligent entrustment.
  • The driver’s employer, if the driver was on the clock. Commercial vehicle cases almost always involve employer liability and a much larger insurance policy.
  • Property owners and managers, in slip-and-fall, inadequate lighting, and negligent security cases.
  • Product manufacturers and distributors, when a defective component (tire, airbag, seatbelt) caused or worsened the injury.
  • Bars and restaurants, under New Mexico’s statutory dram-shop framework (NMSA § 41-11-1), which imposes specific elements (including, in many cases, a showing of reckless or grossly negligent service) beyond ordinary negligence. Whether a dram-shop claim is viable is a fact-specific analysis.
  • Government entities, when a dangerous road condition, missing signage, or government vehicle was involved (see below for special rules).

How insurance adjusters in New Mexico try to reduce claims

Adjusters are not villains. They are doing their job, which is to close claims for as little as possible. The patterns are predictable.

  • The fast call. Within 24 to 48 hours of the crash, often before the injured person has seen a doctor. They sound concerned. They are gathering information to use later.
  • The recorded statement request. You are not required to give one to the other driver’s insurer. Don’t.
  • The quick-settle offer. A few thousand dollars wired tomorrow if a release gets signed today. The release closes the claim forever, including for injuries that have not fully shown up yet.
  • Social media review. They will look. A photo at a birthday dinner becomes “claimant appeared physically active and in good spirits.”
  • Medical authorization overreach. They send a broad release that lets them pull the entire medical history, including pre-accident conditions they will use to argue the injuries were pre-existing.
  • Delay and starve. As medical bills pile up, they wait, betting the claimant will take a lower number out of financial pressure.

Once our team is retained, those calls come to us. We do not take quick-settle offers. We document the full extent of the injuries before making a demand, because that is when the demand has weight.

NM Tort Claims Act: claims against government entities

If an injury involved the City of Albuquerque, Bernalillo County, the State of New Mexico, or any government employee acting in the course of their job (ABQ Ride bus, city vehicle, state highway condition, public hospital), the New Mexico Tort Claims Act (NMSA § 41-4-1 et seq.) applies. This changes the rules in important ways.

  • Notice of claim deadline. Under NMSA § 41-4-16, written notice must be given within 90 days for claims against a local public body or its employees, and within 180 days for claims against the state or its employees. Either way, the clock is short and unforgiving. Missing the notice deadline generally bars the claim even if the underlying limitations period has not run. If you are unsure which entity is involved, treat 90 days as your working deadline and call an attorney immediately.
  • Damages caps. The Tort Claims Act caps damages against government entities at amounts substantially lower than uncapped private claims.
  • Limited waivers of immunity. The government is only liable in specific enumerated categories (vehicle operation, building maintenance, law enforcement misconduct, and a handful of others). If your facts do not fit one of the waiver categories, the claim may be barred even with timely notice.

If a city bus, a defective traffic signal, or a government property incident caused the injury, call an attorney immediately. Not next month. Not next week.

Statute of limitations in New Mexico

The general statute of limitations for personal injury in New Mexico is three years from the date of injury (NMSA § 37-1-8). That is one year longer than Arizona’s, but it is not as much time as it sounds.

Important exceptions and nuances:

  • Wrongful death: New Mexico’s Wrongful Death Act sets a three-year limitation period. The trigger date (date of death versus date of the underlying injury) has been litigated and can depend on the facts. If a death is involved, do not assume the clock starts when you think it does. Get a case-specific answer from an attorney.
  • Government entities: the Tort Claims Act notice deadlines apply (90 days for local, 180 days for state), and the underlying limitations period under the Act is shorter than the general three-year window. Treat these as urgent.
  • Minors: the limitation period for a child’s personal injury claim is generally tolled until the child reaches the age of majority, but parents’ derivative claims (such as for the child’s medical bills) are typically not tolled.
  • Discovery rule: in cases where the injury was not immediately apparent (some medical malpractice or toxic exposure cases), the limitations clock can start running when the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered.
  • Property damage: four years (NMSA § 37-1-4), longer than the personal injury window.

If you are reading this a year or two after your accident, you may still have time. Call and ask.

How much does it cost to hire us

We work on contingency. No fee upfront, no hourly billing, no surprise invoices. Our fee is a percentage of what we recover for the client, and if there is no recovery, there is no fee.

That structure aligns our interests with the client’s. We only make money when the client does, which means we only take cases we believe in.

Costs (filing fees, expert witnesses, medical records, deposition transcripts) are advanced by the firm during the case and reimbursed from the settlement or verdict at the end. We walk through every number in the fee agreement before anything gets signed.

Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to file a personal injury claim in New Mexico?

Three years from the date of injury for most personal injury cases (NMSA § 37-1-8). Claims against local government require a 90-day notice of claim, and claims against the state require a 180-day notice, under the New Mexico Tort Claims Act. Wrongful death claims have their own three-year period under the Wrongful Death Act, with the trigger date sometimes contested. Call sooner rather than later. Evidence disappears and witnesses become harder to find.

Do I need a lawyer if the insurance company already offered me a settlement?

Probably yes, especially if the offer came fast. Quick first offers are almost always well below what a case is worth. Once a release is signed, the claim is closed permanently, including for injuries that have not fully developed yet. A free case review costs nothing and tells you whether the offer is fair.

What if I was partly at fault for my accident?

You can still recover. New Mexico follows pure comparative negligence, so recovery is reduced by percentage of fault but is not eliminated. Even at 70% or 80% at fault, an injured person can still collect 30% or 20% of damages. The adjuster will try to inflate the percentage. Pushing back on that is one of the highest-leverage things an attorney does on a case.

What if the other driver had no insurance?

There may be recovery available under your own uninsured motorist (UM) coverage if you carry it. New Mexico requires insurers to offer UM/UIM coverage, though policyholders can reject it in writing. Many people have UM coverage they did not realize they had. We review every policy that might apply. See also what happens when the at-fault driver’s insurance won’t pay.

How long will my Albuquerque personal injury case take?

It depends on the complexity and how reasonable the insurance company is. A clear-liability case with documented injuries can settle in 4 to 9 months once medical treat

Written by Jared

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