Injury Claims

Hurt in an accident that wasn't your fault? Help exists for exactly this.

Bills, insurance calls, forms — all while you're hurting. Before you accept or sign anything, it's worth two minutes to see where you stand.

See where you stand

Three questions, then your contact info. About two minutes.

Engraved illustration of a clipboard with a claim form, a pen, and a rolled bandage

The plain version

Who qualifies, what you get, and why start here

Who qualifies?

  • People hurt in an accident someone else caused — on the road, at work, at a business, anywhere.
  • People whose injury led to medical care, missed work, or real costs.

What you get

  • A conversation about your options — before you sign anything away.
  • If you have a case, help pursuing it with no upfront cost.Standard contingency practice — American Bar Association

Why start here

  • No documents needed. Your answers are enough to start.
  • Checking is free, and a real person follows up with your next step.

On the record

Plain facts, from official sources.

Deadlines to file an injury claim vary by state — some are as short as one year.

Source: State statutes of limitations

Injury lawyers typically work on contingency: no attorney fee unless money is recovered.

Source: American Bar Association — how contingency fees work

Questions, answered plainly

I'm not sure it was anyone's fault. Should I still check?
Yes. Sorting that out is exactly what the follow-up conversation is for. There are no wrong answers here.
The insurance company already offered me money.
You can still check where you stand before you accept. A signed release usually ends the matter for good, so the moment before signing is the moment to ask questions.
What does this cost?
Nothing. Checking is free and doesn't obligate you to anything.
What happens after I hit the button?
A real person follows up by phone, text, or email about your next step. You decide what happens from there.

Ready when you are.

Three questions, then your contact info. About two minutes. Free to use · No obligation · Not a government agency.

See if you qualify

Before you go — see if you qualify?

Three plain questions. No wrong answers, no cost, no obligation.

See if you qualify