8 min read · Howard-backed intake active; state-specific wording awaiting attorney review
If you were hurt in Arizonawithin the last few days, the most useful thing you can do right now is not rush into a legal decision. It’s to document what happened, get checked by a doctor, and start a written record of every conversation with an insurer or property owner. The legal questions — liability, damages, whether to file suit — come later, and a good attorney will walk you through them on their timeline, not an ad’s.
This hub covers the rules Arizonaactually applies, the deadlines you cannot miss, and when Howard-backed review is likely worth your time. If at any point you’d rather have our intake team look at your specific situation, use the free review below — it takes about four minutes and there is no obligation.
The filing clock
Arizona gives many personal-injury claims a 2 years filing window, but the exact deadline depends on the injury type and defendant. There are limited exceptions — minors, injuries discovered later, and certain government claims have their own rules. Miss the deadline and the court will almost certainly dismiss your case, regardless of how strong the underlying facts are.
Fault in Arizona: Pure
Arizona applies a pure fault rule. Pure comparative fault — recovery allowed even at 99% fault, reduced proportionally.A responsible attorney’s real work, in many cases, is building the record that pushes back on an unfair percentage.
What that looks like in practice
- A jury finds total damages of $100,000. They decide you were 20 % at fault. You recover $80,000.
- Same damages, a different fault finding can reduce recovery or bar it depending on Arizona's rule.
- Insurers know this. Early settlement offers often implicitly assume a fault split that favors them. An attorney pushes back on the split, not just the dollar amount.
Want Howard-backed review of your Arizona case?
Four minutes. No cost. You can stop at any step. The intake team responds within 12 hours and flags whether Howard Injury Law or state-admitted local counsel should evaluate the next step.
What a Arizona claim is actually worth
“What’s my case worth?” is the most-asked question, and the honest answer is: it depends on three inputs — medical bills, wage loss, and pain & suffering, adjusted for your share of fault and the defendant’s insurance limits. The numbers insurers quote you in the first phone call are almost always a floor, not a fair offer.
The three inputs
- Economic damages. Medical bills, future medical costs, lost wages, lost earning capacity. Documented, receipt-by-receipt.
- Non-economic damages. Pain, suffering, loss of enjoyment. Usually calculated as a multiplier (1.5×–5×) of economic damages, depending on severity.
- Insurance ceiling.Your state’s minimum policy may be far below the value of a serious injury — at which point the available coverage and responsible parties become much more important.
When an attorney is worth calling
Not every injury claim needs a lawyer. If your injury is minor, treatment is finished, and the insurer has made a reasonable offer, hiring counsel may take more off the top than it adds. An attorney is most useful when:
- There was a serious injury — concussion, surgery, ongoing treatment.
- Fault is disputed.The other side’s insurer says you caused the incident and you disagree.
- The insurance limitsdon’t cover your damages.
- You’re being pressured to sign a release or give a recorded statement in the first few days.
Start a Howard-backed Arizona intake review.
Free review. 12-hour response. You can walk away at any point before signing any attorney agreement.
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