Phoenix Brain Injury Lawyer

By Jared J. Pehrson | Impact Legal Car Accident Attorneys. Updated January 2026.

If you’re reading this, you or someone in your family probably just got diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury, or you’re starting to suspect one. You want to know three things: what happens next, what your case could be worth, and who pays for treatment that could last years. This page answers all three from the perspective of a Phoenix brain injury lawyer who handles these cases.

Brain injury claims are different from other injury claims. The medical evidence is harder to read. The defense playbook leans heavily on causation and pre-existing conditions. Future-cost numbers in a moderate or severe TBI case can reach seven figures. And a clean CT scan in the ER does not rule out a real brain injury, even though insurance carriers routinely point to one and deny the claim on that basis.

If you want to skip ahead and talk to us, call (602) 345-1818. Free case review.

How a Phoenix Brain Injury Lawyer Builds a TBI Case

A TBI case isn’t won by filing paperwork. It’s won by stacking medical, biomechanical, and economic evidence into a record the insurance carrier has to take seriously. Here’s what our team does on a brain injury file:

  • Preservation letters go out fast. We send written hold-notices to the at-fault driver, their insurer, the trucking company (if applicable), and any property owner involved. Imaging gets preserved. Black-box data gets preserved. Surveillance video gets requested before it’s overwritten on a typical 30-day loop.
  • We pull every scan and every neuro note. CT from the ER, MRI from follow-up, any DTI or fMRI ordered by a neurologist. We don’t rely on summaries. We get the actual imaging and the radiologist’s read.
  • We retain a neuropsychologist. Standard neuro exams can miss subtle cognitive deficits. A neuropsych workup documents the executive-function, memory, and processing-speed losses that often define a mild TBI claim.
  • We retain a life-care planner. For moderate and severe TBI, future medical costs are usually the biggest line item in the case. A certified life-care planner produces the report that supports those numbers in mediation or trial.
  • We retain a vocational rehabilitation expert when the injury affects the client’s ability to return to their pre-injury job. Lost earning capacity is a separate calculation from lost wages.
  • We work with treating physicians, not just retained experts. The neurologist, neuropsychologist, or physiatrist actually treating the client often carries more weight with a jury than a one-time defense expert.
  • We handle insurance communications. No recorded statements without us present. No medical authorizations signed blindly. No rushed settlement before the full severity is documented.

We don’t take on a brain injury case to push it through a volume pipeline. Jared handles these personally.

How TBI Severity Is Graded (Glasgow Coma Scale)

The Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is the standard tool ER doctors use to grade a brain injury at the moment of presentation. It scores three things: eye opening, verbal response, and motor response. The total runs from 3 to 15.

  • Mild TBI: GCS 13 to 15. This is the category most concussions fall into. The patient is awake and responsive, but the injury is real. Symptoms can include headache, memory gaps, light sensitivity, mood changes, and cognitive fog. Recovery is usually weeks to months, but a meaningful share of mild TBI patients develop post-concussive syndrome that lasts much longer.
  • Moderate TBI: GCS 9 to 12. Loss of consciousness often exceeds 30 minutes. The patient may be confused, drowsy, or partially responsive. Permanent deficits are common.
  • Severe TBI: GCS 3 to 8. Coma or near-coma at presentation. ICU admission. Long-term cognitive, physical, and behavioral impairment is the norm.

Severity grading matters because it drives case value. A severe TBI with documented permanent impairment is a catastrophic-injury case with significant future-care needs. A mild TBI with full neurocognitive recovery is a different conversation. Insurance companies know the difference and will work to recategorize a moderate case as mild if the medical record gives them any opening.

That’s why the ER record matters. Get the GCS documented. Get the loss-of-consciousness duration documented. Get every symptom listed. If the ER missed it, the follow-up neurologist visit becomes the anchor instead.

Diagnostic Imaging and Why It Matters for Your Case

Brain injuries are proven with imaging, neuropsych testing, and physician opinion. The imaging side breaks down into four common studies:

  • CT scan. Standard in the ER. Catches bleeds, fractures, and large structural damage. It can miss many mild TBIs entirely. A normal CT does not mean your brain is uninjured.
  • MRI. More sensitive than CT for contusions, diffuse axonal injury (DAI), and small bleeds. Usually ordered when symptoms persist past the ER visit.
  • DTI (diffusion tensor imaging). A specialized MRI technique that maps white-matter tract integrity. DTI can show axonal injury not visible on standard MRI. Not every Phoenix neuro facility offers it, and not every case needs it, but in a contested mild-TBI claim it can be important evidence.
  • fMRI (functional MRI). Measures brain activity rather than structure. Used in select cases to demonstrate cognitive dysfunction.

Here’s the trap: a normal CT scan in the ER is a common reason a legitimate TBI claim gets undervalued. The defense will point to the clean scan and argue there’s no objective injury. That argument can be countered when we put a neuropsych battery, persistent symptoms documented across multiple visits, and (where warranted) advanced imaging into the record. The CDC and peer-reviewed neuro literature recognize that mild TBI frequently presents with normal CT findings. We make sure the jury hears that.

Proving Causation in a TBI Claim

Causation is where many brain injury cases are won or lost. The defense rarely argues “there was no crash.” They argue “the crash didn’t cause this cognitive deficit.” Their three favorite alternatives:

  1. Pre-existing condition. Prior concussion in high school. Prior depression. Prior ADHD. Anything in the medical history that overlaps with current symptoms.
  2. Subsequent event. A fall, a sports incident, a second crash after the one in your claim.
  3. Symptom magnification. The polite term for accusing the client of exaggerating.

We counter each one with specific evidence:

  • Pre-injury baseline records. School records, employment evaluations, and prior medical records that show how the client was functioning before the crash. If pre-crash work reviews were strong and post-crash performance dropped, that supports a causation story.
  • Treating physician testimony. The treating neurologist or neuropsychologist’s opinion on causation generally carries weight a one-time defense IME has to work harder to overcome.
  • Biomechanical experts in cases where the defense argues the crash forces were too low to cause a brain injury. A moderate-speed rear-end collision can produce a concussion. The published biomechanical literature supports that, and we use it.
  • Consistency in the medical record. Symptoms reported the same way to multiple providers across months read very differently than symptoms that appeared only after the lawsuit was filed.

Under Arizona law, you must prove the at-fault party owed a duty of care, committed a breach of duty, and that the breach caused your injury. Causation is the legal pivot in a TBI claim. Get it right and the damages discussion opens up. For the broader framework, see our page on negligence.

Calculating Future Medical Costs for a Brain Injury

For a moderate or severe TBI, future medical care is often the largest component of the claim. Past medical bills might be $80,000. Future care over decades can be many multiples of that.

We build the future-cost calculation with a life-care planner, typically a registered nurse with certified life-care-planning credentials. The planner reviews every medical record, interviews treating physicians, and produces a written plan that itemizes:

  • Ongoing neurology and neuropsychology visits
  • Cognitive rehabilitation
  • Occupational, physical, and speech therapy
  • Psychiatric care and medication management
  • Attendant care or in-home support
  • Assistive technology and home modifications
  • Medication costs across the projected life span

Each line item gets a frequency, a unit cost, and a duration. An economist then takes the planner’s report and reduces the future costs to present value, accounting for medical inflation and discount rates. That present-value number is what we present to the insurance carrier and, if needed, the jury.

Arizona Rules of Evidence require expert testimony to introduce future-medical-cost projections. You can’t just hand the jury a spreadsheet. The planner and economist have to qualify as experts and explain their methodology. We line that up well before mediation.

For background on how this fits into the broader damages framework, see our pages on economic damages, non-economic damages, and the pain and suffering component.

Arizona’s Constitutional Protection Against Damages Caps

Many states have legislatively imposed caps on non-economic damages. Arizona does not, and the reason matters for catastrophic TBI cases.

Article II § 31 and Article XVIII § 6 of the Arizona Constitution prohibit the legislature from limiting the amount of damages recoverable for personal injury or wrongful death. Arizona courts have consistently enforced this protection. The practical effect: a jury verdict in a brain injury case isn’t artificially capped by statute the way it would be in many neighboring states.

This matters most when the future-medical-cost number is large, when the impairment is permanent, or when punitive damages are in play (drunk driving, commercial trucking violations, egregious conduct). The full value of the case can be pursued without a statutory ceiling at the end.

Common Causes of Brain Injuries in Phoenix

We see TBI claims arising from:

  • Car crashes (the most common single cause we handle)
  • Truck and commercial vehicle collisions
  • Motorcycle crashes
  • Pedestrian and bicycle crashes
  • Slip-and-fall and trip-and-fall on commercial property
  • Construction-site incidents
  • Workplace head trauma
  • Recreational and sports incidents
  • Assaults and violent acts
  • Birth injuries
  • Medical errors

Each cause changes the legal analysis. A truck crash brings in federal motor carrier regulations and corporate defendants. A premises fall brings in property-owner duty of care. A construction injury can layer workers’ compensation on top of a third-party claim. The investigation has to be tailored to the mechanism.

When a TBI Comes From a Car Accident

Most of the brain injury cases we handle started as a car crash. The mechanism matters because it tells the biomechanical story:

  • Rear-end collisions produce rapid head acceleration and deceleration. Even at moderate speeds, the brain moves inside the skull and can strike the inner surface. This is a classic concussion mechanism. The crash doesn’t have to be dramatic.
  • T-bone (side-impact) collisions produce lateral acceleration that the neck and head are poorly equipped to absorb. The structural protection of a vehicle is generally weaker on the sides than at the front or rear, which is one reason side impacts are associated with serious head and brain trauma in the crash-safety literature.
  • Rollovers combine multiple impact directions with potential for direct head strikes against the roof, pillars, or pavement. Severe TBI is common in rollover crashes, particularly without strong roof structure or proper restraint performance.
  • Front-end and head-on collisions can drive the head into the steering wheel, dash, or windshield even with airbag deployment. Coup-contrecoup injuries (damage on both sides of the brain) are common.

When the mechanism matches the diagnosis, the case is more defensible.

TBI in Children: Different Standards

Pediatric brain injuries follow different rules.

Symptoms present differently. A toddler can’t describe a headache or memory problem. Watch for changes in feeding, sleep, mood, balance, school performance, and loss of interest in previously favored activities. Regression of learned skills (toilet training, vocabulary) after a head injury is a red flag.

The medical workup looks different. Pediatric neurologists, pediatric neuropsychologists, and developmental specialists take the lead. Long-term tracking matters more, because the full impact of an injury on a developing brain may not surface for years.

The legal timeline is different. Under A.R.S. § 12-502, the two-year personal injury statute of limitations is tolled for minors until the child reaches the age of majority. For most standard personal injury claims, that gives a minor until two years after their 18th birthday to file suit. Important caveat: this tolling rule does not extend the 180-day notice-of-claim deadline for claims against state or municipal government entities under A.R.S. § 12-821.01. If a government entity is involved (a public bus, a city vehicle, an injury on public property), the 180-day notice must still be evaluated and acted on promptly, regardless of the injured person’s age. Do not wait. Evidence disappears, memories fade, and witnesses move. The case is generally stronger when investigated quickly, even if the filing deadline is years out.

What Damages Can Be Recovered in an Arizona Brain Injury Claim

Compensatory damages in a Phoenix TBI case typically include:

  • Past and future medical expenses (ER, hospital, neurology, neuropsych, therapy, medication, assistive equipment, home modifications)
  • Lost wages and lost earning capacity
  • Pain and suffering
  • Emotional distress and mental anguish
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Cognitive and behavioral impairment
  • Loss of consortium (for the spouse, in many cases)
  • Out-of-pocket expenses related to the injury

In cases involving drunk driving, gross negligence, or other egregious conduct, punitive damages may be available on top of compensatory damages. Punitives are not awarded in every case. They require clear and convincing evidence of an evil mind or conscious disregard for safety.

Case value depends on injury severity, treatment history, liability proof, available insurance, and how well damages are documented. We don’t quote ranges before reviewing the file.

Comparative Negligence and TBI Claims

Arizona uses pure comparative negligence under A.R.S. § 12-2505. If you’re 30% at fault for the crash, your recovery is generally reduced by 30%, but you can still recover. There is no automatic bar based solely on the percentage of fault. There is, however, an important exception in the statute: a plaintiff who intentionally, willfully, or wantonly caused or contributed to the injury is barred from recovery. That exception aside, the general rule is proportional reduction rather than elimination.

Insurance adjusters use comparative fault aggressively. They’ll try to shift a share of liability onto you based on speed, lane position, attention, or anything else they can argue. In TBI cases there’s an added wrinkle: clients sometimes have memory gaps about the crash itself. The adjuster will look for ways to use that. Don’t give a recorded statement on your own. Let us handle the communications.

For a deeper walkthrough, see Arizona’s comparative negligence rule.

Statute of Limitations: How Long You Have to File

Arizona’s personal injury statute of limitations is two years from the date of injury under A.R.S. § 12-542. Miss that deadline and the claim is generally barred.

Three issues matter for TBI cases:

  1. Discovery rule. If the brain injury was not reasonably discoverable at the time of the accident (symptoms emerged weeks later, the initial workup was clean), Arizona case law generally allows the clock to start when the injury was, or reasonably should have been, discovered. Application is fact-specific.
  2. Minor tolling. A.R.S. § 12-502 tolls the SOL for injured minors until age of majority for standard personal injury claims. As noted above, this does not extend the separate 180-day notice-of-claim deadline against government entities.
  3. Government entity claims. If the at-fault party is a state or municipal entity (a city vehicle, a public bus, a government employee), A.R.S. § 12-821.01 requires a written notice of claim within 180 days of the accident. Miss that 180-day window and the claim is generally barred, regardless of the two-year SOL.

Do not rely on exceptions. Calendar the earliest possible deadline and act well before it.

How Much Does It Cost to Hire a Phoenix Brain Injury Lawyer?

We handle brain injury cases on a contingency fee. No attorney’s fees unless we recover for you. Case costs and the fee percentage are set out in the written representation agreement before any work begins. Nothing is owed upfront.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I file a TBI claim if my CT scan was normal?

Yes. A clean CT scan does not mean you don’t have a brain injury. CT imaging in the ER is designed to catch life-threatening structural damage (bleeds, fractures, large contusions). It can miss many mild TBIs. These cases can be proven with neuropsychological testing, neurologist opinion, MRI or DTI where indicated, and consistent symptom documentation across multiple providers over time. The “normal CT” defense is common and often beatable with the right workup.

How long do brain injury cases take to settle in Phoenix?

Timing depends on three things: how long it takes for the medical picture to stabilize, how complex the liability and damages issues are, and whether the insurance carrier negotiates in good faith. Some TBI claims resolve within a year. Others, particularly those involving potential permanent impairment, may require waiting until the client reaches maximum medical improvement before the full value of the case can be calculated. Settling before the long-term picture is clear can be a costly decision, which is why we walk every client through the trade-offs in plain English.

What are the signs and symptoms of a brain injury after a Phoenix accident?

Common symptoms include loss of consciousness (even briefly), confusion, memory loss, headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, slurred speech, ringing in the ears, blurry vision, light or sound sensitivity, sleep disruption, mood changes, anxiety, and depression. In children, watch for excessive crying, feeding or sleep changes, regression of skills, and loss of interest in favorite activities. Symptoms can appear hours or days after the accident. If you suspect a brain injury, get evaluated by a medical professional promptly.

What is the deadline to file a brain injury lawsuit in Arizona?

Two years from the date of injury under A.R.S. § 12-542 for most personal injury claims. The discovery rule may extend the clock if the brain injury was not reasonably discoverable at the time of the accident. Minors generally get the clock tolled under A.R.S. § 12-502 until they reach the age of majority. Claims against state or municipal government entities require a written notice of claim within 180 days under A.R.S. § 12-821.01, and that 180-day deadline applies even where minor tolling would otherwise apply.

Can I still recover if I was partially at fault?

Generally yes, under Arizona’s pure comparative negligence statute, A.R.S. § 12-2505. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault rather than barred outright. The statute does contain an exception for conduct that is intentional, willful, or wanton. Insurance adjusters will push hard to inflate your share of fault. Don’t negotiate that part of the case on your own.

Do I have to give the insurance company a recorded statement?

No, and most TBI clients should not until they’ve spoken with an attorney. Recorded statements are designed to lock you into a version of events that may not match what you later discover about your injuries. In TBI cases this is especially risky because cognitive symptoms can affect memory and articulation in the days after the crash. Anything you say can be used to reduce your recovery later.

Get a Free Case Review With a Phoenix Brain Injury Lawyer

If you or a family member is dealing with a brain injury after a crash, fall, or other incident in Phoenix, talk to us before talking to insurance. We’ll review the medical records, the police report, and the policy limits at no charge and give you a straight read on whether you have a case worth pursuing.

Free case review: (602) 345-1818. We answer 24/7. No attorney’s fees unless we recover. Case costs and fee terms are spelled out in the written agreement.

For broader questions about Arizona personal injury claims, see our