Las Vegas Auto Accident Attorneys
We represent injury victims in car accidents across Las Vegas and Nevada, handling every case with trial-level preparation from day one.
No upfront fees
You only pay if we win
Available 24 hours a day
When the Insurance Company Is Already Building Their Case
Within hours of a Las Vegas auto accident, the at-fault driver's insurance company has adjusters, investigators, and defense counsel at work — not to help you, but to minimize what they pay. Every day that passes without trial-ready counsel on your side is a day the evidence weakens and their position strengthens.
What Nevada Law Means for Your Case
You Have Two Years to File
Nevada's statute of limitations for auto accident injury claims is two years from the date of the crash. Property damage claims have three years. This sounds like plenty of time, but it isn't — evidence disappears, witnesses relocate, and insurance companies use delay as a strategy. The earlier we file suit, the stronger your position.
Fault Is Measured in Percentages
Nevada follows a modified comparative negligence rule under NRS 41.141. If you are 50% or less at fault, you can still recover damages, reduced by your percentage of responsibility. If you are 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. This is why insurance companies spend so much effort trying to shift blame onto injured plaintiffs — pushing your fault above the 50% line eliminates their liability entirely. Documenting the scene, preserving witness statements, and retaining reconstruction experts early is how we stop that.
Minimum Coverage Often Isn't Enough
Nevada requires drivers to carry at least $25,000 per person / $50,000 per accident in bodily injury liability, and $20,000 in property damage. Serious injuries — spinal trauma, traumatic brain injury, catastrophic fractures — routinely exceed those minimums. When they do, uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy often becomes the primary source of recovery. We review every applicable policy to identify every source of compensation.
No Cap on What You Can Recover
Unlike some states, Nevada does not cap compensatory damages in standard auto accident cases. Medical expenses, lost wages, future earning capacity, pain and suffering, and loss of consortium are all recoverable in full. The only question is whether the evidence supports the demand — which is where preparation becomes leverage.
How We Prepare Auto Accident Cases for Trial
Scene Reconstruction Within 48 Hours
Skid marks fade. Surveillance footage gets overwritten. Witnesses forget details. We deploy investigators and accident reconstructionists within the first 48 hours whenever possible to document what actually happened before the evidence disappears.
Medical Documentation That Holds Up at Trial
Insurance companies exploit gaps in medical treatment as evidence that injuries aren't serious. We coordinate with trauma specialists, orthopedic surgeons, and neurologists to build medical documentation that tells the full story — not just the emergency room visit, but the long-term trajectory of recovery.
Commercial Policy Investigation
If the at-fault driver was working, delivering, or driving for a rideshare platform at the time of the crash, commercial policies with much higher limits may apply. We investigate employer records, rideshare trip data, and commercial insurance coverage on every case where it could be relevant.
Filed Suit, Not Just Demand Letters
Pre-litigation demand letters tell insurers you hope to settle. Filing suit tells them you're ready for trial. We move to litigation when the insurer's offer doesn't reflect the value of the case — and we file ready to try it.
Representative Auto Accident Results
$1.9M
Rear-end collision resulting in traumatic brain injury
Initial offer was $85,000. Final recovery was 22x that.
$950K
T-bone collision at intersection with multiple fractures
Liability was contested until reconstruction evidence settled it.
$625K
Rideshare accident with soft tissue injuries
Commercial policy coverage tripled the available limits.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case is unique.
Serving Nevada Injury Victims
We represent auto accident victims throughout Las Vegas, Henderson, Summerlin, North Las Vegas, Spring Valley, and Paradise, including crashes on I-15, US-95, I-215, and the Las Vegas Strip corridor. Our attorneys are familiar with Clark County court procedures, local insurance practices, and the specific accident patterns of Nevada roadways.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I do immediately after a car accident in Las Vegas?
Seek medical attention, even if you feel fine — adrenaline masks injuries and delayed treatment is used against you later. Call the police and get a report number. Photograph the scene, all vehicles, and any visible injuries. Get contact information from witnesses. Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance company — including your own — until you've consulted with an attorney.
How long do I have to file a claim in Nevada?
Nevada's statute of limitations for auto accident injury claims is generally two years from the date of the accident. Property damage claims have three years. Certain circumstances can shorten or extend these deadlines, which is why early consultation matters.
The insurance company already offered me a settlement. Should I accept it?
Early settlement offers almost always undervalue serious injuries. Insurers make fast offers because they know injured people have medical bills piling up and limited information about the true value of their claim. An offer made in the first 30 days rarely reflects the full cost of long-term recovery, lost earning capacity, or future medical needs. Have any offer reviewed before you accept it.
What if I was partially at fault for the accident?
Nevada's comparative negligence rule allows you to recover damages as long as you are 50% or less at fault. Your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault, but you are not barred from recovering entirely. Insurance companies often overstate plaintiff fault to push above the 50% threshold — which is why having counsel who can contest fault allocation is critical.
How is my case's value calculated?
Value is a function of medical expenses (past and future), lost wages and earning capacity, pain and suffering, loss of consortium, property damage, and any punitive damages that apply. The real number depends on the severity and permanence of injuries, the strength of liability evidence, and the applicable insurance coverage. A proper valuation requires medical records, expert opinions on long-term prognosis, and vocational analysis of earning impact.
Do I have to go to court?
Most auto accident cases resolve before trial — but the cases that resolve favorably do so because the insurer believed trial was a real possibility. Firms that prepare every case for trial settle cases on better terms than firms that prepare only for negotiation. If your case does go to trial, it means the insurer's offer wasn't fair — and we are ready for that outcome.
Speak With an Auto Accident Attorney
If you or a loved one has been injured in a car accident, we're here to help you understand your options and protect your rights.
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