A car accident victim in Syracuse has three years from the date of the crash to file a lawsuit in New York, and a separate 30-day deadline to file a no-fault claim with their own insurance company. Victims may recover compensation for medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, and future care costs. Typical Syracuse car accident settlements range from $15,000 for soft-tissue injuries to $500,000 or more for crashes involving surgery or permanent impairment, with catastrophic injury cases frequently exceeding $1 million. Porter Law Group has recovered over $500 million for injured clients across New York. Call 833-PORTER9 for a free, no-obligation case review.
Settlement
Jury Verdict
Settlement
Settlement
Insurance carriers in New York pay represented crash victims significantly more than those who handle claims on their own. The Insurance Research Council found that injury victims who hire attorneys recover an average of 3.5 times more than unrepresented claimants. Beyond settlement value, New York's no-fault system contains procedural deadlines that routinely end claims before they begin, and insurance adjusters are trained from day one to find reasons to reduce or deny your payout.
A local Syracuse car accident attorney also understands how these cases move through Onondaga County Supreme Court at 401 Montgomery Street and the Fifth Judicial District. Cases handled here are shaped by local judicial decisions on motions and evidentiary disputes that directly affect your settlement position long before trial. Defense firms representing the major carriers active in Central New York know who prepares for trial and who folds early. That distinction is worth real money.
A Syracuse car accident lawyer handles five core tasks you cannot effectively do on your own:
See Porter Law Group's verified case results for examples of recoveries we have secured for car accident victims across New York.

Take the following seven steps immediately after any car accident in Syracuse to protect your health and your right to compensation.
If you have questions about the right next step in your specific situation, contact Porter Law Group for a free 24/7 consultation.
Syracuse car accident cases generally settle within the ranges below, though every case is evaluated individually based on medical evidence, the strength of liability, available insurance coverage, and the full impact of the injuries on the victim's life.
| Injury severity | Typical settlement range | Examples |
| Minor or soft tissue | $5,000 to $25,000 | Strains, sprains, whiplash with full recovery within weeks |
| Moderate | $25,000 to $100,000 | Concussion, fractures requiring no surgery, herniated disc treated without surgery |
| Serious | $100,000 to $500,000 | Surgery required, permanent restrictions, significant scarring, ongoing chronic pain |
| Severe or catastrophic | $500,000 to $5,000,000 or more | Traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, amputation, paralysis, wrongful death |
Compensable damages in a New York car accident case fall into three categories.
Economic damages cover every measurable financial loss connected to the crash. This includes all past and future medical bills, lost wages from missed work, reduced earning capacity if your injuries affect your ability to work long term, vehicle repair or replacement, and any rehabilitation or home care costs that result from the injury.
Non-economic damages compensate for the human side of what you have been through. Pain and suffering, emotional distress, anxiety, loss of enjoyment of activities you could do before the crash, and the toll your injuries have taken on your relationships all fall here. New York imposes no cap on these damages in most personal injury cases, meaning serious injuries carry significant non-economic value.
Punitive damages are uncommon but available in cases involving extreme recklessness or intentional conduct, such as a driver with a very high blood alcohol level or a motorist who deliberately ran a red light while street racing. When they apply, they can substantially increase the total verdict.
Factors that increase case value include clear liability, severe and well-documented injuries, a permanent impairment diagnosis, high pre-crash earnings, strong available insurance limits, and conduct by the at-fault driver that a jury would find particularly reckless. Factors that decrease case value include delayed medical treatment, gaps in treatment without explanation, pre-existing spinal or orthopedic conditions, comparative fault on the part of the victim, and low insurance limits on the at-fault driver's policy.
New York has four legal rules that directly shape every car accident case filed in Syracuse and Onondaga County. Understanding these before you speak with an insurer or accept any offer is essential.
The deadlines that control your case
Most car accident injury lawsuits in New York must be filed within three years of the crash date. Missing this deadline extinguishes your right to sue entirely. There is also a separate and much shorter deadline that often surprises victims: you must notify your own insurance company and file your no-fault application within 30 days of the accident to preserve your injury protection benefits. If a government vehicle, a city bus, or a poorly maintained public road contributed to your crash, you must file a Notice of Claim against the City of Syracuse or Onondaga County within just 90 days. Missing that 90-day window forfeits the claim regardless of how strong it is. The New York State Unified Court System publishes information on civil filing deadlines for victims who want to verify these timelines independently.
Pure comparative fault
New York allows injured crash victims to recover compensation even if they were partially responsible for the accident. Your award is reduced by your share of fault, but it is never eliminated. A driver found 40% responsible for a $100,000 case still recovers $60,000. This is one of the most plaintiff-friendly rules in the country, and it means that even if an insurer argues you bear some blame, you may still have a strong claim worth pursuing.
The no-fault system and when you can sue for more
New York requires every driver to carry Personal Injury Protection coverage, commonly called no-fault, that pays medical bills and a portion of lost wages regardless of who caused the crash. This coverage has a minimum benefit of $50,000 per person. The New York Department of Financial Services provides consumer guidance on how no-fault claims work and what they cover.
However, no-fault benefits have limits, and they do not compensate you for pain and suffering. To pursue a full claim against the at-fault driver, your injuries must meet what New York calls the serious injury threshold. This means your injury must involve a fracture, significant permanent impairment, substantial scarring, or an injury that kept you from your normal daily activities for at least 90 days out of the first 180 days following the crash. Most injuries that require surgery, produce a permanent diagnosis, or involve documented neurological damage meet this threshold.
Uninsured and underinsured drivers
New York requires all drivers to carry auto insurance, but not every driver on Syracuse roads follows that requirement. If the driver who hit you has no insurance or not enough coverage to compensate you fairly, your own uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage steps in. New York also requires every policy to include this coverage at a minimum level. A car accident attorney will review every available policy and coverage layer before any negotiation begins, including household policies that may cover resident relatives and umbrella policies that provide additional limits.
Car Accident Cases We Handle In Syracuse
Porter Law Group handles every type of motor vehicle accident in Syracuse and Onondaga County. Many car crash cases connect to related claims or involve vehicle types with their own insurance rules and liability considerations.
Other vehicle accidents
Related claims that often arise from car accidents
If your accident does not fit neatly into one of these categories, our Syracuse personal injury lawyers can evaluate your claim and identify the right path forward.
The injuries below are the most common results of car crashes handled by Syracuse attorneys. Each produces different medical costs, recovery timelines, and compensation considerations.
Whiplash and soft tissue injuries. A rapid back-and-forth motion of the neck during a rear-end collision stretches and tears the muscles and ligaments of the cervical spine. Symptoms including pain, stiffness, and headaches may not appear until 24 to 48 hours after the crash. Soft tissue injuries are frequently disputed by insurance companies because they do not appear on standard X-rays, making consistent medical treatment and thorough documentation critical to the value of your claim.
Herniated discs. A car crash can rupture the cushioning material between the vertebrae of the spine, causing that material to press against nearby nerves and produce pain, numbness, and weakness that can radiate into the arms or legs. Herniated discs are documented by MRI and may require epidural injections, physical therapy, or surgery such as a discectomy or spinal fusion. Most New York courts treat a documented herniated disc that restricts function as a permanent injury.
Traumatic brain injury. Any blow or jolt to the head during a crash can disrupt normal brain function, from a mild concussion to a severe injury affecting memory, cognition, speech, and behavior. Diagnosis often requires neuropsychological testing in addition to imaging. Serious traumatic brain injury settlements in New York commonly fall between $250,000 and $2.5 million or more, reflecting the long-term care and the profound impact on the victim's daily life.
Fractures. Broken bones from car accidents are documented by X-ray or CT scan. Simple closed fractures of the wrist or ankle typically heal with casting and produce moderate case value. Fractures of the spine, pelvis, hip, or femur, and any fracture requiring surgical fixation with plates, rods, or screws, produce significantly higher value and often result in permanent hardware in the body.
Internal injuries. High-speed collisions can damage the spleen, liver, lungs, kidneys, and intestines without leaving visible external marks. These injuries are often life-threatening and require emergency surgery. Upstate University Hospital and Crouse Hospital are both designated trauma centers in Syracuse equipped to handle internal trauma from major crashes.
Spinal cord injuries. Damage to the spinal cord itself causes partial or complete loss of motor or sensory function below the injury site. Depending on the level and severity, the result can be partial paralysis or complete quadriplegia. According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center, lifetime care costs for a person with complete spinal cord injury at the cervical level commonly exceed $5 million, which reflects the true long-term value of these claims.
Talk to a Syracuse Car Accident Lawyer Today
You pay nothing unless we win. Call 833-PORTER9 or fill out the form and we'll get back to you within the hour.
Most Syracuse car accident cases resolve within 12 to 24 months from the date of the crash, though cases involving catastrophic injuries or those requiring trial can take three to five years. The timeline below reflects how these cases typically move through Onondaga County.
Cases that settle before a lawsuit is filed average 9 to 14 months. Cases requiring filed litigation average 18 to 30 months. Cases that go to trial typically take 30 to 48 months from the date of the crash to a final verdict.
Porter Law Group has recovered over $500 million for injured clients across New York. Our Syracuse car accident practice is built on four principles.
No fee unless we win. All car accident cases are handled on a contingency basis. You pay nothing out of pocket, and our fee is a percentage of the recovery, only if we win.
Free, no-obligation consultations. Hospital and home visits are available when you cannot travel. Our team is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Local Syracuse trial experience. Cases tried before Onondaga County Supreme Court judges, with deep familiarity of the local defense bar and how regional insurance carriers operate.
Direct attorney access. You will speak with the attorney handling your case, not just a case manager or paralegal. Read client testimonials and review our verified case results to see how we have helped Syracuse families recover. Meet the attorneys who will handle your case on our Attorneys and Staff page, and learn more about our firm and our story.

You have three years from the date of the crash to file a personal injury lawsuit in Syracuse under New York law. However, a separate and shorter deadline requires you to file your no-fault claim with your own insurer within 30 days of the accident. If a government vehicle or poorly maintained public road was involved, you must file a Notice of Claim against the City of Syracuse or Onondaga County within just 90 days of the accident. Missing any of these deadlines can eliminate your right to compensation entirely, which is why contacting an attorney as soon as possible after a crash matters.
Porter Law Group handles car accident cases on a contingency fee basis. You pay nothing upfront, and you pay nothing if we do not recover compensation for you. The standard contingency fee in New York is one third of the recovery. Case expenses such as filing fees, expert witnesses, and deposition costs are advanced by our firm and reimbursed from the settlement only if we win. Initial consultations are always free.
You should consult a car accident attorney before accepting any settlement offer, even for injuries that seem minor at first. Herniated discs and concussions frequently appear minor in the immediate aftermath of a crash and produce significant documented impairment weeks later. Insurance companies offer quick low settlements precisely because they know the full picture is not yet clear. A free consultation costs nothing and will tell you whether legal representation is in your interest.
Yes. New York uses a pure comparative fault rule, which means you can recover compensation even if you contributed to the accident. Your award is reduced by your percentage of fault, but it is never eliminated. A driver found 35% at fault in a $200,000 case still recovers $130,000. Insurance adjusters routinely try to assign more fault to the victim than the facts support, which is one of the clearest reasons to have an attorney involved before any discussion of blame.
New York requires all drivers to carry insurance, but uninsured drivers do cause accidents. If the at-fault driver has no coverage or not enough coverage to compensate you fairly, you can recover through the uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy. New York mandates this coverage at a minimum level on every auto policy. An attorney will also check whether any household policies covering resident relatives or any umbrella policies provide additional coverage you may not know about.

Founder and managing partner of Porter Law Group. Harvard University (B.A., 1994), Syracuse University College of Law (J.D., 1997). Former U.S. Army JAG Corps Captain, Airborne Training School graduate. Super Lawyers 14 consecutive years, 10.0 Superb on Avvo, Distinguished rating from Martindale-Hubbell. Over 20 years of trial experience and $500 million in recoveries.
Reviewed by Michael S. Porter, J.D. | Last updated: [April, 2026]
Our Syracuse car accident lawyers represent crash victims on every major road in Onondaga County, from Interstate 81 and Interstate 690 to the neighborhood streets where most collisions actually occur.
Porter Law Group represents car accident victims throughout the City of Syracuse and across Onondaga County, including these neighborhoods: Downtown, Eastwood, Westvale, Lyncourt, Strathmore, Tipperary Hill, University Hill, Far Westside, Park Avenue, and Sedgwick.
We also serve the following Onondaga County towns and villages: Liverpool, Cicero, DeWitt, Camillus, Manlius, Solvay, North Syracuse, Baldwinsville, Skaneateles, Fayetteville, East Syracuse, Marcellus, Jordan, Tully, LaFayette, and Pompey.
Major roadways we cover include Interstate 81, Interstate 690, Interstate 90 (the New York State Thruway), Route 481, Route 5, Erie Boulevard, East Genesee Street, James Street, Salina Street, West Onondaga Street, and Court Street.
Local hospitals we routinely coordinate with include Upstate University Hospital, St. Joseph's Health, Crouse Hospital, Community Memorial Hospital, Auburn Community Hospital, and Upstate Community Hospital.
Visit our Syracuse, NY location page or browse our statewide office locations to find the Porter Law Group office nearest you. You can also read our latest legal updates and case insights on the Porter Law Group blog.
If you or a loved one was injured in a car crash anywhere in Syracuse or Onondaga County, contact Porter Law Group for a free, no-obligation consultation. We will review your case, explain your rights under New York law, and outline the next steps, at no cost and with no obligation to retain our firm.
Call 833-PORTER9 | Available 24/7 | No fee unless we win

Avoid sharing confidential information via contact form, text, or voicemail as they are not secure. Please be aware that using any of these communication methods does not establish an attorney-client relationship. *By appointment only.
The information contained on this site is proprietary and protected. Any unauthorized or illegal use, copying, or dissemination will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. All content on this site is provided for informational purposes only. It is not, nor should it be taken as medical or legal advice. None of the content on this site is intended to substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Attorney Advertising.
We serve clients in every city and county in New York State. These include places like: The Adirondacks, Albany, Alexandria Bay, Amsterdam, Astoria, Auburn, Ballston Spa, Batavia, Beacon, Binghamton, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Canandaigua, Carthage, Cattaraugus, Catskill, Cayuga Lake, Cazenovia, Chelsea, Clayton, Clifton Park, Cobleskill, Colonie, Cooperstown, Corning, Cortland, Delhi, Delmar, Dunkirk, East Aurora, East Hampton, Elmira, Fayetteville, Finger Lakes, Flushing, Fredonia, Fulton, Garden City, Geneva, Glen Cove, Glens Falls, Gloversville, Gouverneur, Great Neck, Greenwich Village, Hamilton, Hammondsport, Harlem, Haverstraw, Hempstead, Herkimer, Hornell, Hudson, Huntington, Ilion, Ithaca, Jamaica, Jamestown, Johnstown, Kingston, Lake George, Lake Placid, Lewiston, Little Falls, Liverpool, Lockport, Long Island City, Lowville, Malone, Manhattan, Manlius, Massena, Medina, Middletown, Monticello, Montauk, Mount Vernon, New Paltz, New Rochelle, Newburgh, Niagara Falls, North Tonawanda, Norwich, Nyack, Ogdensburg, Old Forge, Olean, Oneida, Oneonta, Ossining, Oswego, Penn Yan, Peekskill, Plattsburgh, Port Chester, Potsdam, Poughkeepsie, Queens, Rhinebeck, Riverhead, Rochester, Rome, Rye, Sag Harbor, Saranac Lake, Saratoga Springs, Schenectady, Seneca Falls, Seneca Lake, Skaneateles, SoHo, Southampton, Spring Valley, Staten Island, Stony Brook, Suffern, Syracuse, Tarrytown, The Bronx, Thousand Islands, Ticonderoga, Troy, Tupper Lake, Utica, Warsaw, Waterloo, Watertown, Watkins Glen, Wellsville, White Plains, Williamsburg, Woodstock, Yonkers, and many more communities throughout New York State.
Copyright © 2026, Porter Law Group. Personal Injury Lawyers
Made with 💛 by Gold Penguin