Car Accident Claims in Ohio
Ohio processes hundreds of thousands of auto accident claims every year. The legal framework governing these claims is built on three pillars: comparative fault, a two-year statute of limitations, and mandatory insurance requirements. Understanding how each applies to your specific crash is the first step toward fair compensation.
Under R.C. § 2315.33, Ohio uses a modified comparative fault system. You can recover damages as long as you are less than 51% responsible for the crash — but your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. A finding of 20% fault on a $100,000 claim means a recovery of $80,000. Insurance companies know this, and they routinely argue for higher fault percentages to reduce payouts. Fighting back requires documented evidence collected from the outset.
What Types of Car Accident Claims We Handle
Ryan Injury Attorneys handles the full spectrum of car accident claims across Northeast Ohio, including rear-end collisions, intersection crashes, left-turn accidents, highway multi-vehicle pileups, distracted driving crashes, drunk driving victims, hit-and-run claims, and accidents involving uninsured or underinsured drivers.
Ohio Law — What Governs Your Claim
Three statutes govern nearly every car accident claim in Ohio.
R.C. § 2315.33 — Comparative Fault
Ohio's modified comparative fault rule allows recovery as long as the plaintiff is less than 51% at fault. Recovery is reduced proportionally by the plaintiff's share of fault. Insurance adjusters routinely attempt to assign inflated fault percentages to claimants — particularly in intersection crashes, lane-change disputes, and crashes at commercial driveways where the contributing factors are ambiguous.
R.C. § 2305.10 — Two-Year Statute of Limitations
Ohio gives car accident victims two years from the date of the crash to file a personal injury lawsuit. Missing this deadline permanently bars the claim regardless of how severe the injuries or how clearly the other driver was at fault. Two exceptions apply: if the victim was a minor at the time of the crash, the two-year period does not begin until the child's 18th birthday; and if a government entity is involved, a 180-day notice of claim must be filed. See our full guide to Ohio's car accident filing deadline.
R.C. § 3937.18 — Uninsured/Underinsured Motorist Coverage
Ohio requires insurers to offer UM/UIM coverage. If the at-fault driver had no insurance or insufficient coverage, your own policy becomes the primary recovery source. See our guide to Ohio UM/UIM claims.
Common Causes and What They Mean for Your Claim
The cause of the crash matters because it determines fault, available insurance coverage, and what evidence must be preserved.
Distracted Driving
Texting while driving, phone use, and other distractions are documented through phone records, event data recorders (EDRs), and witness accounts. Ohio's distracted driving statute supports negligence per se claims when a driver was violating R.C. § 4511.204 at the time of the crash.
Speeding and Reckless Driving
Speed is recorded in EDRs and can be reconstructed from crash scene evidence. A driver cited for speeding at the scene provides a strong basis for a negligence per se argument independent of comparative fault analysis.
Failure to Yield
The most common cause of intersection crashes. Dashcam footage, traffic camera footage, and witness statements are time-sensitive — businesses typically overwrite surveillance within 30 days.
Impaired Driving
DUI/OVI convictions can support punitive damages claims in addition to compensatory damages. Criminal case records, toxicology reports, and OSHP crash reports are critical evidence.
Injuries and Damages
Ohio law permits recovery for both economic and non-economic damages in car accident claims.
Economic Damages
Economic damages include medical expenses (past and future), lost wages, loss of earning capacity, property damage, and out-of-pocket costs. These are quantifiable from medical records, employment records, and expert testimony.
Non-Economic Damages
Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and loss of consortium. Ohio imposes caps on non-economic damages in most cases under R.C. § 2315.18 — generally $250,000 or three times the economic damages, whichever is greater, up to $350,000 per plaintiff. These caps do not apply in cases involving permanent and substantial physical deformity, loss of use of a limb, loss of a bodily organ system, or permanent physical functional injury.
Soft-Tissue Injuries
Whiplash, disc herniations, and nerve injuries are the most frequently disputed injuries in car accident claims. Insurers commonly argue these injuries are pre-existing or exaggerated. Contemporaneous medical documentation, diagnostic imaging, and treating physician testimony are essential to establishing causation and value.
What Insurance Companies Do — and How We Respond
Ohio's insurance market is sophisticated and competitive. The adjusters handling claims in Northeast Ohio are experienced and well-resourced. Unrepresented claimants consistently receive lower outcomes.
The Early Contact and Recorded Statement
Within 48 to 72 hours of most crashes, the at-fault driver's insurer makes contact. The adjuster will request a recorded statement, framing it as routine. It is not routine. Statements made in this window are used to establish fault percentages and minimize injury severity claims. Do not provide a recorded statement to any insurer before consulting an attorney.
Early Settlement Offers
Low settlement offers made within weeks of the crash are designed to close the claim before the full extent of injury is documented. Signing a release permanently bars any future claim, even if the injury worsens significantly. Once signed, a release is irreversible.
Disputed Causation
Insurers frequently argue that injuries documented after a crash were pre-existing. This defense requires a careful response rooted in medical records, imaging, and treating physician testimony demonstrating that symptoms began or worsened after the crash.
The Claim Process
Understanding the sequence of a car accident claim helps victims know what to expect and when to act.
Immediate Steps After a Crash
Call 911 if there are injuries. Exchange information. Document the scene with photographs. Obtain the responding officer's name and agency. Seek medical attention — even if you feel uninjured. Do not admit fault or discuss the accident with the other driver's insurer.
Evidence Preservation
The most time-sensitive evidence in any car accident claim includes: commercial surveillance footage (typically retained 30 days or less), event data recorder (EDR/black box) data, traffic camera footage, witness contact information, and crash scene photographs. An attorney can issue preservation letters to businesses and agencies before evidence is overwritten.
Filing a Claim vs. Filing a Lawsuit
Most car accident claims resolve through insurance negotiations without litigation. If negotiations fail or the insurer's offer does not reflect fair value, a lawsuit is filed in the appropriate court — Rocky River Municipal Court for claims up to $15,000, or the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas for larger claims. Our attorneys are experienced in both venues.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about car accidents in cleveland claims in Ohio.
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Ryan Injury Attorneys handles car accidents in cleveland claims throughout Northeast Ohio. Free consultation. No fee unless we recover.