Personal Injury: Process & Legal Guides in Florida

WHAT TO EXPECT

How a Personal Injury Claim Works in Florida

Florida’s personal injury process is different from most other states. With no-fault insurance rules, a modified comparative fault standard, and specific statute of limitations deadlines, knowing how the system works before you have a claim is critical. These guides walk you through the process from incident to resolution.

Step 1: Immediately After an Injury

Call 911 if needed, seek medical attention even if you feel fine, photograph the scene and your injuries, gather witness information, and do not give recorded statements to insurance adjusters without counsel. What you do in the first 24–72 hours shapes your entire case.

Step 2: Document Everything

Medical records, bills, pharmacy receipts, lost wage documentation, and photographs are the foundation of your claim. Keep a daily journal of your symptoms and how the injury affects your daily life. Your attorney uses this documentation to calculate and prove damages.

Step 3: Florida’s No-Fault Insurance Rule

Florida requires drivers to carry Personal Injury Protection (PIP) insurance, which covers 80% of medical bills and 60% of lost wages up to $10,000 — regardless of who caused the accident. PIP is the first source of compensation in most car accident cases. To step outside of no-fault and pursue additional compensation, your injuries must meet Florida’s serious injury threshold.

Step 4: Florida’s Comparative Fault Law

Florida follows a modified comparative fault rule. If you are found to be more than 50% at fault for your own injuries, you cannot recover damages. If you are partially at fault but 50% or less, your damages are reduced by your percentage of fault. Insurance companies use this rule aggressively — your attorney’s job is to minimize your assigned fault and maximize the defendant’s.

Step 5: The Statute of Limitations

In Florida, most personal injury claims must be filed within 2 years of the date of the injury (reduced from 4 years under 2023 legislation). Wrongful death claims also carry a 2-year deadline. Missing the deadline typically bars your claim permanently. Contact an attorney as soon as possible — do not wait to see if you recover.

Step 6: The Claims and Litigation Process

Most personal injury cases begin with an insurance claim and demand letter. If the insurer refuses to settle fairly, your attorney files a lawsuit. The litigation process includes discovery, depositions, expert witnesses, and potentially a trial. Fighter Law is prepared to take cases all the way to verdict when necessary.

Step 7: How Damages Are Calculated

Florida personal injury damages fall into two categories: economic damages (medical bills, lost wages, future care costs) and non-economic damages (pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment of life, emotional distress). Florida does not currently cap non-economic damages in most personal injury cases. Your attorney works with medical experts and economists to document and present the full extent of your damages.

Step 8: Settlement vs. Trial

The vast majority of personal injury cases settle before trial. A settlement provides certainty and avoids the time and cost of litigation. However, early settlement offers are frequently below the true value of the claim. Your attorney evaluates every offer against the likely trial outcome before advising you to accept or reject.

INJURY TYPES WITH SPECIFIC LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS

Some Injuries Require Specialized Legal Knowledge

The process above applies broadly, but certain injury types have their own legal wrinkles. If your case involves one of the following, read the relevant guide:

  • Car Accidents — No-fault, PIP, and serious injury threshold rules apply
  • Truck Accidents — Federal trucking regulations, multiple liable parties, black box data
  • Wrongful Death — 2-year statute of limitations, limited non-economic damages caps for certain defendants
  • Dog Bites — Florida strict liability statute, no “one bite” rule
  • Slip and Fall — Premises liability, notice requirements, comparative fault issues
  • Negligent Security — Property owner liability for foreseeable criminal acts
  • Birth Injuries — NICA (Florida Birth-Related Neurological Injury Compensation Association) may apply
  • Traumatic Brain Injury — Long-term care costs, expert testimony, life care planning

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