“Personal injury” is an umbrella. Underneath it are very different kinds of cases, each with its own rules, its own kind of proof, and its own deadlines. Here are the main ones, and where to read more about each.
Motor vehicle accidents
The biggest category by far. Car crashes, truck wrecks, motorcycle accidents, rideshare crashes, and people struck while walking or biking. These cases run through Florida's no-fault insurance system first, and the deadlines are unforgiving. If you were hurt on the road, start with our motor vehicle accidents hub, or go straight to the car accidents page.
Premises liability — slip-and-falls and unsafe property
When you are hurt on someone else's property because they did not keep it safe — a wet floor with no warning sign, a broken stair, poor lighting, or a lack of security where a crime was foreseeable. Florida puts a specific burden on the injured person in store slip-and-fall cases, which makes early evidence critical. Learn how these claims work on our premises liability hub.
Medical malpractice
When a doctor, hospital, or other provider gives care that falls below the accepted medical standard and a patient is harmed. These are the most procedurally demanding cases in Florida — they require expert review before you can even file, and they run on a different clock than ordinary injury claims. See our medical malpractice hub for the special rules.
Catastrophic injuries
Not a separate kind of accident, but a separate level of seriousness — spinal cord and brain injuries, amputations, severe burns, and other harm that changes a person's life permanently. The stakes, the medicine, and the lifetime costs are all different, which is why these cases are handled differently. Our catastrophic injuries hub explains how.
Specialty accidents
The cases that do not fit a neat box — dog bites, boating and personal-watercraft accidents, defective products, and similar matters that each carry their own Florida rules. If your situation feels unusual, it probably still has a home; see our specialty accidents hub.
Workers' compensation
If you were hurt on the job, your case usually goes through Florida's separate workers' compensation system rather than a regular injury lawsuit — and it has its own rules and a quick reporting deadline. Our workers' compensation hub walks through what to do after a workplace injury.
There is one more area many injured families need help with — immigration. Being undocumented does not erase your right to be compensated for an injury in Florida, and we help clients understand how the two issues fit together. You can read about that on our immigration hub.