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Georgia Truck Accident Lawyer

As a Southeastern freight hub, Georgia's I-75, I-16, and I-95 corridors carry enormous truck traffic, and crashes with loaded tractor-trailers are often catastrophic. If you were hurt because of someone else's negligence, Injury Claim Team connects you with an experienced Georgia attorney who handles truck accident cases — at no upfront cost.

Truck Accident Claims in Georgia

Georgia sits at the crossroads of Southeastern freight. I-75, I-16, I-95, and I-20 carry tens of thousands of tractor-trailers every day, and a fully loaded commercial truck can weigh 20 to 30 times more than a passenger car. When a truck crashes, the results are often catastrophic.

Georgia Law and Your Truck Accident Claim

Truck cases are governed not only by Georgia negligence law and the modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33) rule, but also by Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulations covering driver hours, maintenance, and cargo. Trucking companies and their insurers dispatch investigators to the scene within hours — which is why preserving the truck's black-box data, logs, and maintenance records quickly is critical. The filing deadline is generally two years from the date of injury (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33).

Georgia's 50% bar rule means even a small shift in assigned fault can dramatically change your recovery. Building strong evidence early is one of the most important things an attorney does.

Compensation You May Recover

Truck crash claims often involve multiple liable parties — the driver, the motor carrier, the cargo loader, and the maintenance provider — and far larger insurance policies than ordinary car wrecks. That makes experienced legal representation especially important to identify every source of recovery.

Common Damages in Truck Accident Cases

  • Medical expenses — emergency care, surgery, hospitalization, rehabilitation, and future treatment.
  • Lost income — wages lost during recovery and reduced future earning capacity.
  • Pain and suffering — physical pain, emotional distress, and reduced quality of life.
  • Out-of-pocket costs — medical devices, transportation to appointments, and home modifications.

Why Act Quickly After a Georgia Truck Accident

Evidence fades fast. Skid marks wash away, surveillance video is overwritten, witnesses forget details, and Georgia's deadlines can be far shorter than the two-year default when a government entity is involved. The sooner you connect with an attorney, the more they can do to protect your claim and pursue full compensation.

How Injury Claim Team Helps

Injury Claim Team is not a law firm — we are a free service that connects injured Georgians with experienced, independent personal injury attorneys. We review your situation at no cost, match you with a lawyer suited to your truck accident claim, and there is never any fee unless your attorney wins your case.

More Ways We Help

Other Georgia Personal Injury Cases We Handle

Car Accident

Georgia's interstates and surface streets see hundreds of thousands of crashes every year, from I-285 pileups in Atlanta to two-lane collisions in rural counties.

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Motorcycle Accident

Georgia's long riding season puts thousands of motorcyclists on the road, and riders suffer severe injuries when drivers fail to see them.

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Pedestrian Accident

Metro Atlanta consistently ranks among the most dangerous regions in the nation for pedestrians, with wide arterial roads and limited crossings.

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Bicycle Accident

From the Atlanta BeltLine to rural highways, Georgia cyclists share the road with fast, often distracted traffic.

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Drunk Driving Accident

Despite strict Georgia DUI laws, impaired drivers cause devastating crashes across the state every year.

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Wrongful Death

When negligence takes a loved one, Georgia's wrongful death statute lets surviving family members seek justice and financial security.

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Slip and Fall

Georgia property owners must keep their premises reasonably safe under O.C.G.A. § 51-3-1 — when they don't, serious falls follow.

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Premises Liability

From negligent security at apartment complexes to unsafe parking decks, Georgia property owners owe a duty to keep visitors reasonably safe.

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Medical Malpractice

When Georgia doctors, hospitals, or nurses fall below the accepted standard of care, the consequences can be life-altering.

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Traumatic Brain Injury

Traumatic brain injuries can change a life forever and require compensation that accounts for a lifetime of care.

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Spinal Cord Injury

Spinal cord injuries often mean permanent disability and lifelong care — and demand maximum compensation.

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Workplace Injury

Construction, logistics, poultry processing, and warehouse work injure thousands of Georgia workers every year.

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Dog Bite

Georgia's dog-bite liability law (O.C.G.A. § 51-2-7) protects victims, especially children, from serious attacks.

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Uber & Lyft Accident

Uber and Lyft crashes in Atlanta and beyond involve complex insurance layers — knowing which policy applies is critical.

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Uninsured Motorist

When the at-fault driver has no insurance or too little, your own UM/UIM coverage may be the key to recovery.

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Bus & Transit Accident

Crashes involving MARTA buses, school buses, and charter buses raise unique liability and government-claim issues.

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Burn Injury

Severe burns from crashes, fires, electrical accidents, and defective products require specialized, long-term care.

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Defective Product

When a defective product causes injury, manufacturers and sellers can be held strictly liable under Georgia law.

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Nursing Home Abuse

Georgia's large senior population makes nursing home neglect and abuse a serious and underreported problem.

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Workers' Compensation

Injured on the job in Georgia? The State Board of Workers' Compensation system has strict deadlines and procedures most workers never see coming.

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Questions & Answers

Truck Accident FAQs

Nothing upfront. Our network attorneys work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no fee unless they recover compensation for you. Your case review is always free and confidential.

Most Georgia injury lawsuits must be filed within two years of the injury under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33. If a government entity is involved, an ante litem notice may be due in as little as six months, so it is important to act quickly.

Georgia follows modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33). You can still recover compensation as long as you were less than 50% at fault, though your award is reduced by your percentage of fault.

It depends on the severity of your injuries, your medical bills and future care, lost income, the degree of fault, and the available insurance. A free review is the best way to understand the potential value of your claim.

Injured in Georgia? Don't Wait — Evidence Disappears.

Georgia's deadlines can be as short as six months when a government entity is involved. Get your free, confidential case review now and protect your right to compensation. A specialist will reach out within the hour.

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