Collecting Damages After a Car Accident

Florida is a no-fault state. This means that drivers must purchase a Personal Injury Protection (PIP) policy with a minimum limit of $10,000 to cover medical expenses and lost wages due to accident injuries regardless of who causes an accident. The plans must cover the insured, relatives living in the insured’s household, persons operating the insured’s motor vehicle, passengers of the motor vehicle, and people whom the insured’s motor vehicle struck.

PIP plans cover the following damages:

Options if You Max out Your PIP Policy

Unfortunately, many people find that the minimum required $10,000 policy isn’t enough to cover the full costs of their injuries. Because of this, it is important to establish who was at fault for the accident and whose insurance is responsible for paying for the damages. Florida allows for non-economic damages such as pain and suffering to be sought through personal injury lawsuits only in cases where the injury is permanent.

Permanent injuries include the following:

The amount of your recovery will depend on how serious your injuries are as well as the surrounding circumstances. Common damages awarded in Orlando car accident cases include:

To prove your damages in your Orlando car accident personal injury case, you must show negligence on the part of the other driver. To show negligence, you must establish:

You can lose important details and evidence of the accident long before the four-year statute of limitations runs out, so after an accident, if you think you might have a claim, you shouldn’t hesitate to seek legal help from the Law Office of Jerry Jenkins.

Can More Than One Party Cause the Accident?

Florida permits car accident lawsuits to name more than one at-fault party. Here’s how multiple parties can cause a single accident:

What if You Were Partially to Blame for the Accident?

You can still seek compensation for the accident due to Florida’s pure comparative negligence rule, even if your own negligence was partially to blame. An example of this would be if the other driver rear-ended your car due to following too closely, but you also had a brake light out that may have prevented the other driver from seeing that you were slowing down or coming to a stop.

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