Pedestrian Accidents · Fort Lauderdale

Fort Lauderdale pedestrian accident lawyer.

A person on foot has no airbag, no steel cage, no second chance. When a car hits a pedestrian in Broward, the injuries are often life-changing — and the question of who pays is rarely simple. For 40 years, Robert DiStefano has fought these cases for South Florida families. Same-day, confidential case review. No fee unless we recover for you.

  • 40+ yearsFlorida personal injury
  • $100M+ recoveredfor Florida accident victims
  • 4.8 ★ / 51verified Google reviews
When a car hits a person on foot

A Fort Lauderdale pedestrian accident lawyer who knows how these cases really work

South Florida is one of the most dangerous places in the country to be a pedestrian. Wide, fast roads. Long blocks between crosswalks. Heavy tourist traffic and busy nightlife. When a driver hits someone walking, the person on foot takes the full force of it — and the result is too often a broken pelvis, a head injury, or worse. These are not fender-benders. They are some of the most serious cases we handle.

Here is the question that surprises people most: who pays your medical bills when you were not even in a car? In Florida, the answer is often your own auto insurance. If you or a relative you live with owns a vehicle, your Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage can pay your early medical bills even though you were walking. If you do not own a car, coverage may come from the vehicle that hit you, or from other policies. Sorting out which coverage applies — and stacking every available source — is the first job in a pedestrian case.

The second job is fault. Drivers and their insurers almost always claim the pedestrian "came out of nowhere" or "stepped off the curb." The truth usually lives in the crosswalk markings, the signal timing, the skid marks, and the witnesses — evidence that disappears fast. Talk to us before you speak to the driver's insurance company — the call is free, and the first days matter most.

The Florida law that decides your pedestrian case

Four rules that control whether you get paid

Pedestrian claims pull from a different mix of laws than ordinary car crashes — coverage rules, right-of-way rules, hit-and-run penalties, and a filing deadline the 2023 reform made shorter. Here is what controls your case.

Fla. Stat. § 627.736

Your own PIP can cover you on foot

Florida's Personal Injury Protection (PIP) law lets a pedestrian collect up to $10,000 in early medical bills from their own auto policy — or from a relative's policy in the same household — even though you were walking, not driving. The same 14-day treatment rule applies: see a doctor within 14 days or you can lose the benefit. If you own no car, we look to the striking vehicle and other coverage.

Fla. Stat. § 316.130

Right-of-way and crosswalks

Florida law spells out when a driver must yield to a pedestrian and when a pedestrian must yield to traffic. Drivers must give way to people in a marked or unmarked crosswalk at an intersection; pedestrians crossing mid-block must yield. Where you were when you were hit — and what the signal said — often decides fault, which is why we lock down the scene early.

Fla. Stat. § 768.81 amended 2023

The 51% fault bar

Under Florida's modified comparative negligence rule, your recovery drops by your share of blame — and if a jury finds you more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing. Insurers lean on this hard in pedestrian cases, arguing you jaywalked or were distracted. Holding your share of fault down is often the whole fight, and we build the case to win it.

Fla. Stat. § 95.11(4)(a) amended 2023

Two years to file — not four

The 2023 reform (House Bill 837) cut the statute of limitations for most injury claims from four years to two years from the date of the crash. Severe pedestrian injuries take time to understand and document — but wait too long and the court can throw out even a strong case. The clock starts the day you are hit.

This page provides general information about Florida law and is not legal advice. Statutes and case law change; your specific case requires a consultation.

Where pedestrians get hit in Broward

We know these corridors because we walk them too

A pedestrian case is intensely local. The crosswalk, the lighting, the speed limit, and the kind of driver on that road all shape who is to blame. Here is where we see people on foot get hurt.

The beach corridor

  • A1A & the oceanfront — visitors crossing between the sand and the hotels, often outside the crosswalk, against fast beach traffic.
  • Hollywood Broadwalk — dense foot traffic where the strip meets the road and drivers don't expect people stepping out.
  • Distracted drivers — sightseers watching the water instead of the crossing in front of them.

Downtown & nightlife

  • Las Olas Boulevard — crowded restaurant and bar blocks where late-night and impaired drivers meet people on foot.
  • US-1 (Federal Highway) — wide, fast lanes with long gaps between signals, a classic mid-block crossing danger.
  • Valet & rideshare zones — sudden pull-outs and drop-offs that catch pedestrians by surprise.

Near the airport & transit

  • Around FLL — out-of-town drivers in unfamiliar rental cars, plus travelers on foot with luggage near busy approach roads.
  • Bus stops & transfer points — people crossing to reach a stop on roads built for speed, not for walking.
  • Hit-and-run risk — high-traffic corridors where a driver who hits someone and flees can vanish in seconds.

Forty years on these streets means we know which intersections have cameras, which corridors lack lighting, and how a Broward jury sees a driver who didn't slow down for a person on foot.

Why DiStefano Law

Robert handles your pedestrian case himself

At many firms, a serious injury case gets handed to a case manager and you rarely speak to a lawyer. That is not how we work. Robert DiStefano has practiced Florida personal injury for more than 40 years, and he is the one who reviews your crash, tracks down every layer of coverage, deals with the insurers, and decides strategy.

You pay nothing up front. We take pedestrian injury cases on contingency — no fee unless we recover for you — and the first case review is free, confidential, and same-day. See related case results →

01

Tell us what happened

Call or send the form. We listen, answer your questions, and give you a candid assessment of whether you have a case — same day, at no cost to you.

02

We find the coverage

We trace every policy that can pay — your own PIP, the driver's insurance, and any other source — and we lock down the crosswalk and scene evidence before it's gone.

03

We fight for full value

We prove the driver was at fault, beat back the "you stepped out" argument, and push for everything your injuries are worth — in settlement or at trial.

Hurt in a different kind of crash? We also handle bicycle accident claims and car accident cases across Broward County. Not sure where your situation fits? Reach our Fort Lauderdale office and we'll point you the right way.

Pedestrian accident questions, answered

What injured pedestrians ask us most

Who pays my medical bills if I was on foot and don't have car insurance?
You may still have coverage. In Florida, if you or a relative who lives with you owns a vehicle, that auto policy's Personal Injury Protection (PIP) can pay your early medical bills even though you were walking. If you own no car and live with no one who does, coverage can come from the vehicle that hit you, and from the at-fault driver's liability insurance for the rest. Part of our job is finding every policy that can pay — people are often surprised how much coverage is actually available once we dig in. Bring us what you have and we'll sort it out for free.
The driver says I wasn't in the crosswalk. Can I still recover?
Often, yes. Crossing outside a marked crosswalk does not automatically make the crash your fault, and being in one does not automatically clear you. Florida uses comparative negligence: fault can be shared, and you can still recover as long as you were not more than 50% to blame. Drivers always have a duty to watch for people on foot and to avoid hitting them when they can. What matters is the full picture — the signal, the speed, the lighting, and whether the driver was paying attention. We gather that evidence and push back on the "you stepped out" story.
The car that hit me drove off. What are my options in a hit-and-run?
A hit-and-run does not leave you without options. First, report it to police right away — leaving the scene of a crash with injuries is a serious crime in Florida, and a report starts the search. Even if the driver is never found, your own auto coverage may still pay: PIP can cover early medical bills, and uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage, if you carry it, can pay for the rest. We move fast to pull camera footage and witness accounts that can identify the driver, and we line up every coverage source so a fleeing driver doesn't leave you stuck with the bills.
I was visiting from out of town when I got hit. Can I still bring a claim?
Yes. You do not have to live in Florida to bring a claim for a crash that happened here — Florida law applies because the injury happened on Florida roads. We handle the claim against the at-fault Florida driver and their insurer, and you can do most of the process from home; we keep tourists and seasonal visitors updated by phone and email. If you carry auto coverage in your home state, it may also come into play. The key is to act before Florida's deadline runs and before the evidence near the beach or the airport disappears.
Can I recover for severe, life-changing injuries?
Yes. Pedestrian crashes cause some of the most serious injuries we see — head and brain trauma, spinal injuries, broken bones, and permanent disability. Florida law lets you pursue compensation for medical bills, future care, lost income, lost earning ability, and pain and suffering. Because these claims can be large, insurers fight them hard and often open with a lowball offer. We build the full picture of how the crash changed your life, bring in the medical proof, and pursue everything your case is worth — with no fee unless we recover for you.
Client reviews

What clients say about working with us

4.8 ★★★★★ 51 verified Google reviews Read all on Google →

★★★★★

“The best lawyer in South Florida. Thank you DiStefano for all the hard work that you and your team have done to get me amazing results.”

Taravia Google

★★★★★

“I had a wonderful experience with Robert! He fought hard for me and kept me in the loop the whole time. The whole office is just great!”

Paulavia Google

★★★★★

“Mr. DiStefano is the best! Kept me up to date with everything, and his paralegal Michelle also kept us informed. Happy with my settlement — I highly recommend him.”

Stacy Leevia Google

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Talk to a Fort Lauderdale pedestrian accident lawyer today

Tell us what happened. The review is free, the call is confidential, and you pay no fee unless we recover for you.

(954) 572-8000
Robert DiStefano, Esq. · Fort Lauderdale