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Personal Injury Lawyer Scottsdale
East Valley Accidents Deserve East Valley Representation

Scottsdale's busy corridors, resort traffic, and high-speed suburban roads make it one of the most accident-prone areas in the East Valley. Whether you were injured on Scottsdale Road, the Loop 101, or inside a local business, you deserve an attorney who understands your case and your community.

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Why Scottsdale Injury Cases Need Local Knowledge

Scottsdale is not Phoenix. The demographics, the road layouts, the types of accidents, and even the insurance companies involved are different. Scottsdale has a mix of high-speed arterials like Scottsdale Road and Frank Lloyd Wright Boulevard, tourist-heavy areas like Old Town, and residential neighbourhoods with limited visibility and poor lighting at night.

Maricopa County accounts for the majority of Arizona's traffic fatalities each year. Within the county, Scottsdale's corridors are consistently among the most dangerous. The Loop 101 Pima Freeway, which runs through the heart of Scottsdale, sees heavy commuter traffic daily and is a regular site for rear-end collisions, lane-change accidents, and multi-vehicle pileups.

An attorney familiar with Scottsdale knows which intersections are notorious, which insurance adjusters serve the area, and how the Scottsdale City Court system operates. That local knowledge matters when building your case.

Common Scottsdale Personal Injury Cases

  • Car accidents on Scottsdale Road, the Loop 101, and Indian Bend Road
  • Rear-end collisions in heavy commuter traffic on the Pima Freeway
  • Pedestrian injuries in Old Town Scottsdale where foot traffic meets vehicle traffic
  • Slip and fall injuries at resorts, golf courses, restaurants, and retail centres
  • Bicycle accidents on Scottsdale's shared-use paths and road shoulders
  • Rideshare accidents involving Uber and Lyft in entertainment districts
  • Motorcycle accidents on North Scottsdale's winding desert roads
  • Dog bite injuries in residential areas and public parks

Arizona's Comparative Fault Rule and What It Means for You

Arizona uses a pure comparative negligence system under A.R.S. 12-2505. This means you can still recover compensation even if you were partially responsible for the accident. Your award is reduced by your percentage of fault, but it is not eliminated. Insurance companies know this and will try to assign as much blame to you as possible to reduce their payout. A skilled attorney can push back on inflated fault assessments and protect your full recovery.

What Compensation Can Scottsdale Injury Victims Claim?

Arizona law allows personal injury victims to recover several categories of damages. Medical expenses including emergency care, surgery, rehabilitation, and future treatment costs. Lost wages for time missed from work and reduced earning capacity if your injuries are long-term. Pain and suffering for the physical and emotional impact of your injuries. Property damage for vehicle repair or replacement. In cases involving extreme recklessness or intentional misconduct, punitive damages may also be available.

The Two-Year Deadline You Cannot Miss

Under Arizona's statute of limitations, you have two years from the date of your injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. This applies to car accidents, slip and falls, and most other personal injury claims in Scottsdale. Two years sounds like a long time, but evidence degrades, witnesses forget, and insurance companies have no incentive to make your claim easy. The sooner you speak to an attorney, the stronger your case will be.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

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

Arizona's statute of limitations gives you two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. This applies whether your accident happened on Scottsdale Road, the Loop 101, or anywhere else in the city. Missing this deadline almost always means losing your right to compensation entirely.

What types of personal injury cases happen most in Scottsdale?

Car accidents are the most common, particularly along Scottsdale Road, the Loop 101 Pima Freeway, and Indian Bend Road. Slip and fall injuries are also frequent given the volume of resorts, golf courses, and retail centres. Pedestrian accidents occur regularly in Old Town Scottsdale where foot traffic is heavy.

Does Arizona's comparative fault law affect my Scottsdale injury claim?

Arizona follows a pure comparative negligence rule under A.R.S. 12-2505. This means you can recover compensation even if you were partially at fault. Your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. So if you are found 20 percent responsible for a crash on the 101, your compensation is reduced by 20 percent but not eliminated.

How much does a Scottsdale personal injury lawyer cost?

Most personal injury attorneys in the Scottsdale area work on a contingency fee basis. That means no upfront cost and no payment unless your case is successful. The standard contingency fee in Arizona ranges from 33 to 40 percent of the settlement or verdict amount.

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