Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Motorcycle accident laws, helmet requirements, negligence rules, and case outcomes vary significantly by state. Always consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before making any legal decisions.
As Memorial Day weekend approaches — historically the deadliest 72-hour stretch of the year for riders — the roads fill with motorcyclists and distracted drivers. The results are predictable and devastating. According to the most recent NHTSA data, 6,228 motorcyclists were killed in traffic crashes in 2024, representing 16% of all U.S. traffic fatalities. Per mile traveled, motorcyclists face a fatality rate roughly 27 to 28 times higher than passenger car occupants. And yet, when the insurance adjuster calls — usually within 24 to 48 hours of the crash — injured riders are often the ones left fighting to prove they deserved to be on the road at all.
That fight is not fair. Insurance companies are sophisticated institutions with armies of adjusters and attorneys trained to minimize your payout. Biker bias — a documented prejudice against motorcycle riders that exists in both public perception and insurance negotiation rooms — often means you’re offered 30 to 50 percent less than you’d receive if you’d been in a car. A motorcycle accident lawyer who specializes in rider cases can be the single most important decision you make in the aftermath of a crash.
This guide breaks down everything you need to know: how motorcycle accident lawyers charge fees, what average settlements look like by injury type, the legal traps to avoid, how helmet laws and negligence rules affect your case, and exactly how to find the right attorney to fight for maximum compensation.
The Biker Bias Problem — and Why It Costs You Money
There is a quiet prejudice that runs through personal injury law, and it works against you the moment someone learns you were riding a motorcycle. Juries, insurance adjusters, and even some general practice attorneys carry assumptions about riders — that they are reckless, that they were speeding, that they were somehow asking for it. The data tells a completely different story.
The data tells a clearer and more defensible story than the marketing ever does. The landmark Hurt Report — the most comprehensive motorcycle accident causation study conducted in the United States — found that in roughly two-thirds of multi-vehicle motorcycle crashes, the driver of the other vehicle violated the motorcyclist’s right of way and caused the accident. The most predominant cause: the other driver simply did not see the motorcycle before the collision, or did not see it until it was too late to avoid it. NHTSA has consistently reinforced this finding, stating that the majority of multi-vehicle motorcycle crashes are caused when other drivers fail to detect and recognize motorcycles in traffic. Yet riders bear the reputational burden of the accident far more often than car drivers do. Insurance companies know this and use it strategically.
The practical effect is measurable. Studies and attorney reports across the country indicate that motorcycle riders often receive 30 to 50 percent lower initial settlement offers compared to car accident victims with equivalent injuries. An adjuster counting on biker bias to go unchallenged is an adjuster making a calculation about your ignorance — not your case’s actual value.
Most Common Motorcycle Injuries
Without the steel frame, airbags, and crumple zones of a car, motorcyclists absorb the full force of any collision. The human body is not built to withstand road contact at speed. These are the injuries that appear most frequently in motorcycle accident claims:
- Road rash — Present in the vast majority of non-fatal crashes. Ranges from superficial abrasions to deep wounds requiring skin grafts. Even “minor” road rash can become infected and leave permanent scarring.
- Broken bones — Legs, arms, wrists, and collarbones are most commonly fractured. Compound fractures requiring surgery generate significantly higher medical bills and longer recovery periods.
- Head trauma — Concussion and traumatic brain injury (TBI) occur even with helmet use. Symptoms may not be immediately apparent, which is why refusing medical evaluation at the scene is a serious mistake.
- Spinal cord injuries — Partial or complete spinal damage can result in permanent disability, paralysis, and lifetime care costs that dwarf initial medical bills.
- Internal organ damage — Blunt abdominal trauma from handlebar impact or road contact can damage the liver, spleen, and kidneys, requiring emergency surgery.
- Burns — Contact with a hot exhaust pipe during a fall, or asphalt friction, produces burns that are extremely painful and prone to infection.
- “Biker’s arm” — When a rider is thrown from a motorcycle, the instinctive reaction is to extend the arm to break the fall. The violent impact transmits force up the arm and into the brachial plexus — the network of nerves running from the neck through the shoulder and down the arm. The result is a distinctive cluster of injuries: fractured wrists and forearms, dislocated shoulders, torn rotator cuffs, and brachial plexus nerve damage that can cause partial or complete loss of sensation and motor control in the arm and hand. Unlike a broken bone that heals cleanly, nerve damage is often permanent. Biker’s arm injuries routinely require multiple surgeries, months of occupational therapy, and in severe cases result in permanent disability. Insurance adjusters frequently undervalue these claims because the visible injury — a fractured wrist — looks less severe than the neurological damage underneath it. A motorcycle injury attorney knows to commission proper nerve conduction studies and engage neurological expert witnesses to document the true extent of the damage.
Many of these injuries are not immediately visible. Adrenaline suppresses pain in the minutes following a crash. This is why the standard advice from every motorcycle accident attorney is identical: seek medical evaluation even if you feel fine. A medical record documenting the same-day evaluation is critical evidence. Gaps in treatment are one of the first things insurance adjusters use to argue your injuries were not serious.
Average Settlement Amounts by Injury Type
Settlement amounts vary enormously based on injury severity, fault allocation, insurance policy limits, state laws, and the quality of legal representation. The figures below represent typical ranges reported across similar cases — they are not guarantees and should not be interpreted as predictions for any specific claim. A motorcycle accident attorney in your jurisdiction can give you a far more accurate assessment after reviewing the facts of your case.
| Injury Type | Typical Settlement Range | Key Factors |
|---|---|---|
| Road rash / Minor injuries | $10,000 – $30,000 | Scarring, infection risk, lost wages |
| Broken bones (single fracture) | $30,000 – $100,000 | Surgery required, recovery duration |
| Multiple fractures | $100,000 – $250,000 | Rehabilitation, multiple procedures |
| Spinal cord injury | $500,000 – $2M+ | Permanence, mobility loss, lifetime care |
| Traumatic brain injury (TBI) | $1M – $5M+ | Cognitive impact, long-term care, lost earning capacity |
| Amputation | $500,000 – $3M | Prosthetics, adaptive living, psychological impact |
| Wrongful death | $1M – $10M+ | Survivor dependency, economic contribution, pain and suffering |
| Sources: Brown & Crouppen settlement database (2021–2024, ~100 cases); ConsumerShield law firm survey (November 2025); The Injury Lawyers state-by-state dataset (2025); law firm disclosure records. Individual outcomes vary significantly by state law, fault allocation, and policy limits. These figures are reported averages, not guarantees. Consult a motorcycle accident attorney in your jurisdiction. | ||
For context: an analysis of nearly 100 motorcycle accident lawsuits between 2021 and 2024 found an average settlement of approximately $66,000, with a range from roughly $7,500 to $375,000. A separate November 2025 analysis put the average closer to $99,000. The wide variance illustrates exactly why “what is the average settlement” is the wrong question — the right question is what the specific facts of your case are worth, which only a qualified attorney can determine. Cases involving catastrophic injuries, clear liability, and strong legal representation have resulted in verdicts and settlements worth millions, including a 2025 Texas jury award of $831 million — the largest in San Antonio’s history — to a permanently injured motorcyclist.
If your injuries are catastrophic, you may also want to understand how structured settlements work — receiving compensation in periodic payments rather than a lump sum can have significant tax and financial planning implications.
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer Fees and the Contingency Structure
The most important thing to understand about motorcycle accident lawyer fees is that for the vast majority of cases, you pay nothing upfront and nothing at all if your attorney does not win. This is the contingency fee model, and it exists specifically to ensure that injured people — regardless of financial means — can access qualified legal representation against well-funded insurance companies.
Standard Contingency Fee Breakdown
- Pre-lawsuit settlement: 33.33% of the total recovery (the most common rate for cases resolved before a lawsuit is filed)
- After filing a lawsuit: 40% of the total recovery
- On appeal or trial: 45–50% of the total recovery
- Case costs and expenses: Separate from the attorney fee — includes filing fees, expert witness fees, accident reconstruction, medical record retrieval, and deposition costs. Typically ranges from 2–10% of the settlement, deducted after the attorney fee is calculated.
Some firms use a sliding scale approach within this range — a simpler, clear-liability case may attract a lower percentage fee, while a complex, multi-defendant case may warrant a higher rate. Always ask about the exact fee structure in your initial consultation and make sure it is spelled out in your written agreement before signing anything.
Most reputable motorcycle accident law firms offer a free initial consultation and do not require any payment unless they win your case. If a firm asks for money upfront to evaluate your motorcycle accident claim, that is a significant red flag.
Understanding how legal fees are structured in personal injury law is closely related to how attorneys are compensated in other high-stakes cases. You can compare these structures in our guide to truck accident lawyer fees and compensation strategies.
Helmet Laws by State and Their Direct Impact on Your Claim
Helmet laws are not just a safety issue — in the context of a motorcycle accident lawsuit, your helmet use or non-use at the time of the crash can directly reduce your settlement under comparative negligence principles. Even in states that do not require helmets, an insurance adjuster may argue that not wearing one contributed to the severity of your head injuries and attempt to reduce your claim accordingly.
| State | Helmet Requirement | Claim Impact |
|---|---|---|
| California | All riders, all ages | No helmet = up to 30% fault allocation; strong enforcement |
| New York | All riders, all ages | Strict enforcement; significant claim reduction if helmetless |
| Florida | Riders under 21, or those with less than $10,000 medical insurance | No helmet can reduce claim by 20–40% even when technically optional |
| Texas | Riders under 21 only (over 21 may opt out with proof of insurance/course) | For riders over 21, optional use generally doesn’t affect claim; exceptions apply |
| Illinois | No requirement for any rider | Absence of law means no direct fault allocation; insurers may still argue severity |
| Pennsylvania | Required under 21; over 21 may opt out after 2+ years licensed | Opt-out status matters; head injury claims scrutinized closely |
| Georgia | All riders, all ages | No helmet = contributory factor; can significantly reduce damages |
| Michigan | Over 21 may opt out with insurance/experience requirements | No-fault state; unique rules apply. Consult an attorney immediately. |
| Ohio | Required under 18 only | Adults have no legal requirement; insurer arguments still possible |
| Colorado | Required under 18 only | Adults have no legal requirement; comparative fault applies generally |
| Washington | All riders, all ages | Mandatory; non-compliance directly used in fault allocation |
| Oregon | All riders, all ages | Universal requirement; strict impact on injury claims |
| Maryland | All riders, all ages | Contributory negligence state — any fault, including helmet, can bar recovery entirely |
| Virginia | All riders, all ages | Contributory negligence state — same risk as Maryland; helmet violations are dangerous to your case |
| Arizona | Required under 18 only | Adults legally free to choose; insurer challenges common on head injury cases |
| Minnesota | Required under 18 only | Motorcycles excluded from MN’s no-fault system; lane filtering legal as of July 1, 2025 (standard liability rules apply) |
| Iowa | No requirement for any rider | No legal basis for fault allocation on helmet; but severity arguments persist |
| New Hampshire | No requirement for any rider | Only state with no seat belt or helmet law; minimal fault impact |
| Laws change. Verify current requirements in your state with a licensed motorcycle accident attorney before drawing conclusions about your specific case. | ||
It is worth noting that helmets save lives regardless of legal requirements. According to the CDC, helmets reduce the risk of death by approximately 37% and the risk of head injury by roughly 69%. Wearing one protects your life and protects the full value of your legal claim.
Lane Splitting Laws and Their Impact on Your Accident Claim
Lane splitting — riding between lanes of slow or stopped traffic — is a practice with significant legal variation across states, and its legal status at the time of your accident can meaningfully affect your ability to recover compensation.
- California: The only state where full lane splitting is explicitly legal, provided it is done safely. California’s Vehicle Code Section 21658.1 gives the CHP authority to define guidelines. A lane-splitting rider in California is not automatically at fault for an accident — the circumstances matter.
- Utah, Arizona, Montana, Colorado, and Minnesota: Allow “lane filtering” — a related but distinct concept permitting motorcycles to pass stopped or slow-moving vehicles under specific speed conditions. Colorado legalized lane filtering on August 7, 2024 (under a sunset provision expiring September 1, 2027 pending a safety review). Minnesota followed on July 1, 2025, allowing filtering when surrounding traffic moves at 25 mph or less, provided the motorcycle does not exceed 15 mph above the surrounding traffic speed. None of these are blanket lane-splitting permissions equivalent to California’s law.
- Most other states: Lane splitting is either explicitly prohibited or not addressed by statute (which courts typically treat as prohibited). If you were lane splitting in one of these states at the time of your accident, this will very likely be raised as a contributing factor to your fault, potentially reducing or eliminating your recovery depending on the state’s negligence framework.
If lane splitting was a factor in your crash, consult a motorcycle accident attorney immediately before providing any statement to an insurance company. What you say about your position on the road before legal guidance can significantly harm your case.
Comparative vs. Contributory Negligence: What Determines Your Recovery
The negligence framework in your state determines not just whether you can recover compensation, but how much — and in some states, whether you can recover anything at all. This is one of the most consequential legal concepts in any motorcycle accident case.
Pure Comparative Negligence States
States including California, Florida, New York, Washington, and Alaska use a pure comparative negligence system. Under this approach, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault — but you can still recover even if you are primarily responsible for the accident. A rider found 70% at fault in a $100,000 case would still recover $30,000. This is the most favorable framework for injured parties.
Modified Comparative Negligence States (50% or 51% Bar)
The majority of U.S. states — including Texas, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Pennsylvania, and approximately 30 others — use a modified comparative negligence rule. Here, you can recover as long as your fault does not exceed 50% or 51% (depending on the state). If you are found to be 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. Your damages are still reduced proportionally if you are below the threshold.
Contributory Negligence States (Critical Warning)
Four states and the District of Columbia — Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, and D.C. — still follow the contributory negligence doctrine. Under this rule, if you are found to be even 1% at fault for your accident, you may be barred from recovering any compensation whatsoever. This is an extraordinarily harsh standard that makes experienced legal representation in these states especially critical. Insurance adjusters in contributory negligence states are highly motivated to find any minor fault on your part, because that single finding can eliminate your entire claim.
If a motorcycle accident results in a fatality, the negligence framework also governs wrongful death claims. Our guide on wrongful death attorneys and maximizing settlements covers this critical area in depth. For a broader grounding in how fault is proven across personal injury cases — including the evidence standards that apply to any negligence claim — our guide on slip and fall lawsuits and proving liability provides useful foundational context.
What Insurance Adjusters Will Try — and How to Recognize Each Tactic
Insurance adjusters are professionals whose job is to close claims at the lowest possible cost. This is not a moral judgment — it is a business reality. Understanding their standard playbook is the first step toward not being outmaneuvered by it.
- The 24–48 hour call: Adjusters contact accident victims as quickly as possible — before pain has fully set in, before you’ve consulted an attorney, and before you have a clear picture of your injuries and their costs. The goal is to get information and impressions while you’re still in shock.
- The recorded statement request: “We just need a brief recorded statement to process your claim.” This is one of the oldest traps in the personal injury playbook. Recorded statements can be edited, taken out of context, and used against you. You are not legally required to give one to the other party’s insurer. Politely decline until you have legal representation.
- The quick, low offer: A fast settlement offer, often made within days of the accident, is designed to close the case before you understand the full extent of your injuries or your legal rights. Accepting it typically releases all future claims — including for injuries that may not fully manifest for weeks or months.
- The broad medical authorization: Insurers may ask you to sign a broad release allowing access to your complete medical history. Their goal is to find pre-existing conditions to blame your injuries on, or old records that undermine your current claims. Do not sign any medical authorization without attorney review.
- Social media monitoring: Anything you post after the accident — photos at a family event, a comment about feeling “okay,” a video of you walking — can be used to argue your injuries are less severe than claimed. This monitoring is legal and extremely common.
- Surveillance: In higher-value claims, insurers sometimes hire private investigators to conduct physical surveillance. If your claim involves significant disability, expect the possibility that your activities may be observed and recorded.
The most powerful protection against all of these tactics is the same: hire a motorcycle accident attorney before providing any formal statements or signing any documents. Most attorneys who handle motorcycle cases offer a free case review — there is no cost to getting guidance before you make a potentially costly mistake.
The First 72 Hours After a Motorcycle Accident: A Step-by-Step Guide
What you do immediately after a crash has a lasting impact on both your health and the strength of your legal case. These steps are listed in order of priority:
- Call 911. A police report is not optional — it is a foundational document in any insurance claim or lawsuit. It establishes the date, time, location, parties involved, and an initial assessment of fault. Even if injuries seem minor, insist on a police response and report.
- Photograph and video everything. Before the scene is cleared, document: your motorcycle and any damage; the other vehicle(s); skid marks, debris, and road conditions; traffic signals and signs; your visible injuries; weather conditions; and any contributing road hazards like potholes or poor signage.
- Gather witness information. Get names, phone numbers, and if possible email addresses from anyone who saw the crash. Witness testimony frequently becomes critical if liability is disputed.
- Do not admit fault. Do not say “I’m sorry,” “I didn’t see you,” “I was going fast,” or any other statement that can be construed as an admission. You may be in shock and your recollection of the events may be incomplete.
- Do not speak to the other driver’s insurance company. Exchange information with the other driver as required by law. Do not give a statement to their insurer. You are not required to, and doing so without legal counsel can seriously damage your claim.
- Seek medical attention — even if you feel fine. Adrenaline can mask pain for hours. Internal injuries, concussion, and soft tissue damage often have delayed onset. A same-day medical evaluation creates an essential record linking your injuries to the crash. Gaps in treatment — even a day or two — are used by insurers to argue you weren’t seriously hurt.
- Do not post on social media. Nothing. Not about the accident, not about your condition, not about your weekend plans. Insurers monitor social media as a matter of course on all significant claims.
- Contact a motorcycle accident attorney within 48 hours. Most offer free consultations. Evidence degrades, witnesses forget details, and surveillance footage from nearby businesses is routinely overwritten within 72 hours. Early engagement with an attorney preserves the evidence that wins cases.
If your motorcycle accident occurred while you were working or making deliveries, you may also have a workers’ compensation claim running parallel to your personal injury case. Our workers’ compensation rights and claims guide explains how these can interact.
Documentation Needed for Maximum Settlement
The strength of your settlement is directly proportional to the quality of your documentation. Insurance companies and juries respond to evidence. The more thoroughly you document every aspect of your damages, the harder it becomes for an insurer to argue your losses are overstated. Every item below should be collected, organized, and provided to your attorney as early as possible.
- Police report — The foundational document establishing the official record of the crash. Obtain a copy as soon as it is available.
- Complete medical records — From every provider who has treated you: emergency room, primary care, specialists, physical therapists, mental health professionals. Incomplete records create gaps that insurers exploit.
- Photographs and video — Scene documentation, vehicle damage, visible injuries taken immediately and in the days following (as bruising and swelling often worsen).
- Witness statements — Written or recorded accounts from anyone who saw the accident or its immediate aftermath.
- Motorcycle repair and replacement estimates — Get multiple estimates from reputable shops. If your bike is totaled, market value documentation for the model, condition, and any custom modifications is essential.
- Lost wages documentation — Pay stubs, employer letters, tax returns (for self-employed riders), and documentation of any business opportunities missed due to your injuries.
- Pain journal — A daily written record of your physical pain levels, limitations on activities, emotional state, and the ways your injuries affect your daily life. This is one of the most underused tools in motorcycle injury claims, and one of the most effective at supporting non-economic damage claims for pain and suffering.
One coverage area riders consistently overlook until it is too late: uninsured and underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage. A significant percentage of drivers who cause motorcycle accidents carry no insurance or carry policy limits far too low to cover the actual damages in a serious crash. If you carry UM/UIM coverage on your own motorcycle policy, it steps in to cover the gap when the at-fault driver cannot. Some states require insurers to offer UM/UIM coverage; others make it optional. If you did not specifically decline it in writing, you may have it and not realize it. Pull your policy documents and have your attorney review them before concluding that an uninsured at-fault driver means you have no recovery. In many cases, UM/UIM coverage is the most important asset in your entire claim — and one of the most commonly missed.
If a defective motorcycle component contributed to your accident — a brake failure, a throttle malfunction, a tire defect — you may also have a product liability claim against the manufacturer. Our guide on product liability claims for defective goods explains how to pursue these in parallel with your accident claim.
Statute of Limitations by State — Deadlines You Cannot Afford to Miss
A statute of limitations is a legal deadline. Miss it, and no matter how strong your case is, no matter how severe your injuries are, you will almost certainly be permanently barred from recovering any compensation. Courts enforce these deadlines with very few exceptions. Do not assume you have time — contact an attorney early.
| State | Filing Deadline (Personal Injury) | Notable Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Alabama | 2 years | Contributory negligence state; consult attorney immediately |
| Alaska | 2 years | Pure comparative negligence |
| Arizona | 2 years | — |
| California | 2 years | 6 months for claims against government entities |
| Colorado | 2 years | 180 days for government entity claims |
| Florida | 2 years | Reduced from 4 years effective 2023; no-fault state with motorcycle exceptions |
| Georgia | 2 years | — |
| Illinois | 2 years | — |
| Kentucky | 1 year | One of the shortest deadlines in the country; act immediately |
| Louisiana | 1 year | Extremely short; contact an attorney within days of the accident |
| Maryland | 3 years | Contributory negligence state; any fault bars full recovery |
| Michigan | 3 years | No-fault state with complex motorcycle-specific exclusions |
| Minnesota | 2 years | Motorcycles excluded from no-fault system; standard liability rules apply |
| New Jersey | 2 years | Modified no-fault; motorcycles may have limited PIP coverage |
| New York | 3 years | No-fault state; motorcycles excluded from NY no-fault coverage |
| North Carolina | 3 years | Contributory negligence state; any fault bars recovery |
| Ohio | 2 years | — |
| Pennsylvania | 2 years | Choice no-fault system; motorcycles excluded from PIP |
| Tennessee | 1 year | Short deadline; immediate legal consultation essential |
| Texas | 2 years | — |
| Virginia | 2 years | Contributory negligence; 1% fault can eliminate entire claim |
| Washington | 3 years | — |
| Wisconsin | 3 years | Wrongful death: 2 years from date of death (not accident) |
| Deadlines for claims against government entities are almost universally shorter — sometimes as little as 60 to 180 days. Verify current law in your specific state with a licensed attorney. This table does not constitute legal advice. | ||
Special Considerations for Motorcycle Riders
Motorcycle accident cases involve several unique issues that general personal injury attorneys may not be equipped to handle effectively. These are among the most frequently undervalued or overlooked areas of motorcycle claims:
Custom Motorcycle Valuation
Insurance companies use standard databases to determine the value of a totaled motorcycle. If your bike has aftermarket parts, custom fabrication, performance modifications, or extensive customization, the database value will almost certainly be far below what you actually have invested. A motorcycle accident attorney with rider experience knows to document every modification, retain receipts, and engage independent appraisers when necessary to fight for full replacement value.
Aftermarket Parts Coverage
Standard auto and motorcycle insurance policies often exclude or significantly limit coverage for aftermarket components. Knowing whether your policy includes accessory coverage — and understanding the at-fault driver’s liability coverage — determines whether custom parts losses can be recovered at all. This is a negotiation point that requires persistence and documentation.
Helmet Camera and Dashcam Footage
Action cameras mounted to helmets or bikes have become increasingly common among riders, and for good legal reason. Footage capturing the moments before, during, and after a crash can be conclusive on the question of fault. If you were recording at the time of your accident, preserve that footage immediately and ensure your attorney has it before any other party does.
Riding Club and Group Witnesses
If you were riding with a group at the time of the accident, other riders are potential witnesses with direct observation of events. Their testimony carries weight precisely because they are experienced motorcyclists who understand normal riding behavior and can articulate why the other driver’s actions were dangerous. Your attorney should interview group riders promptly.
If your accident involved a watercraft or occurred in a marine work context, the negligence framework is entirely different. Our guide on maritime injury lawyers and Jones Act claims addresses high-stakes injury cases in maritime settings.
How to Choose the Right Motorcycle Accident Lawyer
Not every personal injury attorney is equipped to handle a motorcycle accident case effectively. These are the questions that cut through the marketing and reveal whether a lawyer is genuinely the right fit for your case:
- Do you ride motorcycles? An attorney who rides brings firsthand understanding of road dynamics, rider behavior, and the cultural context of motorcycling. They are inherently better positioned to counter biker bias narratives and explain rider decision-making to a jury.
- What percentage of your caseload is motorcycle-specific? An attorney who handles one or two motorcycle cases a year alongside hundreds of slip-and-fall and rear-end collision cases is a generalist, not a specialist. Look for firms where motorcycle cases represent a substantial portion of the work.
- What have your last five motorcycle accident settlements or verdicts been? Specific numbers demonstrate a track record. Vague statements about “fighting for maximum compensation” are not the same as documented outcomes.
- Do you have trial experience, or do you primarily settle? Insurance companies track which attorneys go to trial and which don’t. If an insurer knows your attorney will never take a case to a jury, they have less incentive to make a fair settlement offer. A lawyer with genuine trial experience often produces better settlements precisely because the threat of trial is credible.
- Will I communicate directly with you, or primarily with paralegals? High-volume personal injury firms often assign cases to junior staff or paralegals after signing. Clarify who will actually handle your file, attend your depositions, and negotiate your settlement before you sign any representation agreement.
- Are you a member of any motorcycle attorney associations? Organizations such as the American Motorcyclist Association and specialty trial lawyer groups focused on rider representation indicate professional commitment to this specific area of law.
For additional context on how to evaluate personal injury attorneys across different case types, our guide on construction accident lawyers covers similar evaluation criteria for high-stakes injury cases.
Red Flags: When to Walk Away from a Motorcycle Accident Lawyer
The personal injury legal market includes a wide range of quality. These warning signs indicate an attorney or firm that may not serve your best interests:
- Promises a specific dollar amount at the initial consultation. No ethical attorney can guarantee an outcome. Anyone who tells you your case is “worth $500,000” before reviewing all the facts and evidence is either uninformed or making a sales pitch, not giving you legal advice.
- A general practice attorney who handles motorcycle cases “occasionally.” Occasional exposure to motorcycle cases is not the same as specialization. The nuances of biker bias, helmet law interactions, lane-splitting arguments, and comparative fault require consistent, deep experience.
- Pressure to sign a representation agreement immediately. A reputable attorney gives you time to ask questions, review the agreement, and consider your options. High-pressure tactics to sign on the spot are a red flag regardless of the practice area.
- Mass advertising firms that “refer out” cases. Some heavily advertised personal injury operations are primarily case acquisition and referral businesses. They sign clients and transfer the actual representation to smaller firms, taking a portion of the fee in the process. This reduces both the quality of representation and the percentage of your settlement that reaches you.
- No riders in the firm. This is not disqualifying on its own, but an absence of any riding experience or genuine connection to motorcycle culture in a firm claiming to specialize in motorcycle cases is worth noting.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How much does a motorcycle accident lawyer cost?
- The overwhelming majority of motorcycle accident attorneys work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing upfront and nothing at all unless your attorney wins your case. Standard contingency fees range from 33.33% (pre-lawsuit) to 40% (post-lawsuit filing). Case expenses such as filing fees, expert witnesses, and medical record retrieval are typically deducted separately from the settlement. A free consultation to evaluate your case carries no obligation.
- What is the average motorcycle accident settlement?
- Based on recent case data, average motorcycle accident settlements range from approximately $50,000 to $100,000 for moderate injury cases, with severe injury cases routinely exceeding $500,000 and catastrophic injury cases reaching into the millions. Settlement values depend heavily on injury severity, total medical costs, fault allocation, insurance policy limits, and state law. There is no single “average” that applies to all cases — your case requires individual evaluation.
- When should I hire a motorcycle accident lawyer?
- As early as possible — ideally within 24 to 48 hours of the accident. Early engagement allows your attorney to preserve evidence, guide you on what not to say to insurers, and ensure critical documentation is collected before it disappears. Surveillance footage from nearby businesses is often overwritten within 72 hours. Witnesses’ recollections fade. Acting quickly protects your case.
- Do I need a lawyer if the accident was partly my fault?
- In most states, yes. Under comparative negligence rules, you can often still recover compensation even if you bear some fault — your damages are simply reduced by your percentage of responsibility. Only in contributory negligence states (Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina, Virginia, D.C.) does any fault potentially bar your entire claim. An attorney can evaluate the specific facts and state law to determine your realistic recovery options.
- What is a “no win no fee” motorcycle accident lawyer?
- This is another term for the contingency fee arrangement standard in motorcycle accident cases. Your attorney receives payment only if they successfully recover compensation for you. If they do not win your case, you owe no attorney fees. You may still be responsible for case costs in some arrangements — clarify this in your retainer agreement.
- Does not wearing a helmet hurt my motorcycle accident claim?
- It depends on your state. In states requiring helmets for all riders, not wearing one can result in a fault allocation that reduces your settlement — sometimes by 20 to 40 percent. In states where helmets are optional for adults, insurers may still argue that helmet use would have reduced your head injury severity, attempting to reduce the value of that specific component of your claim. This argument varies in effectiveness by jurisdiction. Consult a motorcycle accident attorney in your state for a specific assessment.
- How long does a motorcycle accident lawsuit take?
- Most motorcycle accident cases resolve without going to trial. Cases that settle typically resolve within 6 to 18 months. Cases that go to litigation can take 2 to 4 years or longer, depending on court schedules, the complexity of liability disputes, and the extent of medical treatment still ongoing. Settling before reaching maximum medical improvement (MMI) is generally inadvisable, because until you reach MMI you don’t know the full extent of your long-term medical costs.
- Can I get compensation if the at-fault driver has no insurance?
- Potentially yes. If you carry uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage on your own policy, it can provide compensation when the at-fault driver is uninsured or underinsured. Some states require UM/UIM coverage; others make it optional. A motorcycle accident attorney can help identify all available sources of compensation, including your own policy, third-party liability (road conditions, product defects), and government entity claims if applicable.
- What is a free case review with a motorcycle accident specialist?
- A free case review (also called a free consultation) is an initial meeting — typically 30 to 60 minutes — where a motorcycle accident attorney evaluates your case at no charge and with no obligation to hire them. They will review the facts, assess liability, estimate a settlement range, and explain the legal process. Most reputable motorcycle accident firms offer these without cost. This is always the recommended first step after ensuring medical treatment is underway.
- How does lane splitting affect my accident claim?
- If you were lane splitting in a state where it is prohibited or legally ambiguous at the time of your accident, this will likely be raised as a contributing factor to your fault. Depending on the state’s negligence framework, this can reduce or eliminate your recovery. California is currently the only state with explicit legal authorization for lane splitting. In Utah, Arizona, and Montana, limited lane filtering at stops is permitted under specific conditions. An attorney in your jurisdiction can assess how the specific circumstances interact with local law.
- What should I not say after a motorcycle accident?
- Do not admit fault, apologize, or make any statement suggesting you were responsible. Do not estimate your speed. Do not speculate about what happened. Do not say “I’m fine” or “I don’t need medical attention.” Do not provide a recorded statement to the other party’s insurance company without legal counsel. Do not discuss the accident on social media. Anything you say can and will be used to reduce your settlement or deny your claim.
- Can I sue for a motorcycle accident if I was speeding?
- In most states, yes — but your recovery will likely be reduced. Under comparative negligence, your damages are reduced by your percentage of fault. If you were speeding and found 30% at fault, you recover 70% of your damages in a pure or modified comparative state. In contributory negligence states, even a partial fault finding from speeding may bar recovery entirely. The key is whether the other party was also negligent, which is common in multi-vehicle motorcycle crashes.
- What is “biker bias” and how does it affect my settlement?
- Biker bias refers to a documented prejudice against motorcycle riders held by some members of the public, juries, and insurance adjusters. It manifests as an assumption that riders are reckless or that accidents involving motorcycles are the rider’s fault. Insurance companies exploit this bias to justify lower settlement offers. Motorcycle accident specialists counter it through expert testimony, accident reconstruction, witness preparation, and jury selection strategies developed from experience with rider-specific cases.
- Are motorcycle accident settlements taxable?
- In most cases, compensation for physical injuries and medical expenses is not subject to federal income tax under IRS rules. However, punitive damages and interest on settlements are generally taxable. The tax treatment of lost wages may also differ. Tax law is complex and individual circumstances vary — consult a tax professional regarding the specific tax treatment of your settlement. This article does not constitute tax advice.
- What if a road defect caused my motorcycle accident?
- If a pothole, missing guardrail, inadequate signage, or road maintenance failure contributed to your accident, you may have a claim against the government entity responsible for that roadway. Government entity claims have dramatically shorter filing deadlines — sometimes as little as 60 to 180 days from the accident — and follow different procedural rules than standard personal injury claims. Contact a motorcycle accident attorney immediately if road conditions were a contributing factor.
- Can a motorcycle accident attorney help with a wrongful death claim?
- Yes. If a motorcycle accident resulted in the death of a family member, a motorcycle accident attorney can pursue a wrongful death claim on behalf of surviving family members. These claims seek compensation for loss of financial support, loss of companionship, funeral expenses, and the pain and suffering experienced before death. Wrongful death cases often involve their own statute of limitations — sometimes running from the date of death rather than the date of the accident. Our guide on wrongful death attorneys covers these claims in detail.

Daniel Hayes is the founder and sole researcher at AdvoraHQ. He covers U.S. personal finance, insurance, and consumer law — working directly from IRS publications, federal and state statutes, court opinions, and SEC filings rather than secondary summaries. His focus is the gap between what readers think they know and what the source documents actually say. Daniel is not a licensed attorney, CPA, or financial advisor; his articles are educational and not personalized advice. Reach him at Daniel.Hayes@advorahq.com.



