Most people who call a personal injury attorney after a car accident are not there because they planned to. They are there because something went wrong with the process they assumed would be straightforward.
The insurer disputed liability. The settlement offer did not come close to covering the bills. Symptoms that seemed minor at the scene turned into something that required surgery. The other driver had no insurance.
Hiring a car accident lawyer is not about being aggressive or litigious. It is about understanding what you are actually entitled to under the law and having someone who knows how to get it.
The reasons below are not abstract. They reflect the specific ways legal representation changes outcomes in real cases.
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1. Insurance Companies Are Not Trying to Maximize Your Settlement
Insurance adjusters are professionals whose job is to resolve claims for as little as the company is legally and contractually required to pay. That is not an accusation. It is just how the business works.
Some of the most common tactics adjusters use include:
Disputing medical necessity
Arguing that your injuries were pre-existing
Requesting recorded statements before you know the full extent of your injuries.
Making early settlement offers that seem reasonable before the long-term picture becomes clear.
Once you accept a settlement and sign a release, you cannot go back for more if your recovery takes longer than expected or if complications develop months down the road.
The NYC Bar Association explicitly advises accident victims not to speak with the at-fault driver's insurer without first consulting a personal injury lawyer.
2. New York's No-Fault System Is More Complex Than It Looks
Under New York Insurance Law Article 51, your own Personal Injury Protection coverage pays for your initial medical expenses and a portion of your lost wages regardless of who caused the accident, up to $50,000.
That sounds like a built-in safety net, and it is, up to a point.
The catch is that no-fault PIP does not cover pain and suffering or other non-economic losses. To recover those, you have to step outside the no-fault system and bring a lawsuit against the at-fault driver. But New York does not let everyone do that automatically.
Under Insurance Law § 5102(d), you can only sue for pain and suffering if your injuries meet the statutory "serious injury" threshold, which includes fractures, permanent limitations of a body organ or system, significant disfigurement, and a medically determined impairment that prevents substantially all normal daily activities for at least 90 of the first 180 days after the accident.
Whether your injuries meet that definition is not always obvious. It depends on how your medical records characterize your condition, which diagnostic language is used, and how courts in your jurisdiction have interpreted the statute in comparable cases.
3. The Deadlines Are Strict and Unforgiving
No-fault benefit applications must be submitted to your insurer within 30 days of the accident under Insurance Regulation 68. Medical bills must be submitted within 45 days of treatment. Lost earnings claims must be filed within 90 days.
Missing any of these can result in outright denial of benefits for claims that are otherwise entirely legitimate.
If you have grounds to file a personal injury lawsuit, the statute of limitations is three years from the date of the accident under CPLR § 214. Wrongful death claims must be filed within two years of the date of death under Estates, Powers and Trusts Law § 5-4.1.
If the accident involved a government vehicle or a defect in a public road, a Notice of Claim may need to be filed as soon as 90 days after the incident before any lawsuit is even possible.
The DMV also requires that Form MV-104 be filed within 10 days for accidents involving injury, death, or more than $1,000 in property damage.
Failing to file is a misdemeanor that can result in license or registration suspension.
4. Fault Disputes Directly Reduce What You Recover
New York follows pure comparative negligence under CPLR § 1411. This means your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. If a jury awards $300,000 but finds you 25 percent responsible for the accident, you receive $225,000.
Insurance adjusters understand this rule very well, and disputing the injured party's share of fault is a standard method of reducing what the insurer pays.
Those fault arguments do not need to meet a high evidentiary threshold to be effective in settlement negotiations.
They just need to shift the percentage enough to justify a lower offer. Countering them requires evidence: police reports, traffic camera footage, witness statements, and in some cases accident reconstruction analysis.
In cases involving commercial vehicles, multiple drivers, or accidents caused partly by a road defect, identifying all potentially liable parties is itself a legal task that requires familiarity with how employer liability, municipal liability, and third-party claims work.
Those additional sources of recovery are often missed entirely by people handling claims on their own.
5. You May Be Entitled to More Than You Think
Most people who have been in a car accident think about compensation in terms of what they can see right now: the medical bills that have arrived, the days of work already missed.
What often goes unaccounted for is the full range of damages the law may allow.
Once you meet New York's serious injury threshold and can bring a claim outside the no-fault system, recoverable damages can include future medical costs, future lost earning capacity, rehabilitation expenses, pain and suffering, and loss of enjoyment of life. Quantifying those future losses requires expert involvement. A vocational expert may need to assess how the injury affects your ability to work over a career. A medical expert may need to project long-term treatment costs. An economist may need to calculate what those projected costs are worth in present value terms.
Building and presenting that evidence in a way that holds up under challenge and motivates a fair settlement is a skill that comes from handling these cases regularly. Adjusters know the full range of what the law allows. Unrepresented claimants often do not, and that information gap is reflected directly in what they recover.
6. Uninsured and Hit-and-Run Accidents Require a Different Approach
Accidents involving uninsured drivers or drivers who flee the scene do not follow the standard liability claim path. New York requires all auto policies to include uninsured motorist coverage, which provides a source of recovery when the at-fault driver cannot pay.
Victims of uninsured drivers or hit-and-run accidents may also be eligible for benefits through the Motor Vehicle Accident Indemnification Corporation, though coverage limits and procedural requirements apply.
Making a UM claim and coordinating with MVAIC involves specific deadlines, particular notification requirements to your own insurer, and in some cases arbitration procedures rather than standard litigation.
Settling a liability claim before properly coordinating with your own UM carrier can inadvertently waive rights you did not know you had. A lawyer who handles these claims regularly knows the correct order of operations and how to access all available sources of recovery without foreclosing any of them prematurely.
7. Trial Capability Affects Settlement Value
The vast majority of car accident cases settle before trial. But the possibility of trial is what gives settlement negotiations their practical force. An insurer that knows your lawyer is willing and able to take a case to a jury has different incentives than one dealing with an unrepresented claimant or a lawyer who rarely litigates.
Defense attorneys retained by insurance companies are experienced litigators. New York civil procedure governs how lawsuits are filed, how discovery is conducted, how motions are argued, and how evidence is presented at trial. Procedural errors, from missed filing deadlines to improperly disclosed evidence, can lead to dismissal of claims or exclusion of evidence that would have strengthened your case. Having an attorney with genuine trial experience is protective even in cases that ultimately resolve without going to court, because that credibility shapes what the other side puts on the table.
What Does It Cost to Hire a Car Accident Lawyer?
The contingency fee structure is one of the most important and least understood aspects of personal injury law. Most car accident lawyers, including the Porter Law Group, take cases on contingency. You pay nothing upfront and nothing out of pocket while the case is pending. If the case resolves in your favor, the attorney receives an agreed percentage of the recovery. If there is no recovery, there are no legal fees.
This structure means the financial risk is carried by the attorney, not the injured person. It also means lawyers screen cases before accepting them, which provides its own form of honest assessment. If your case has merit, an experienced personal injury attorney will tell you. If it does not, that is also worth knowing before you spend months pursuing a claim with no realistic path to recovery.
Missing a Deadline After a Car Accident Could Cost You Compensation
A car accident lawyer can help navigate New York's filing requirements and protect your right to recover damages.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why should I hire a lawyer after a car accident if the other driver was clearly at fault?
Clear liability does not mean the insurer will offer fair compensation on its own. It resolves the question of who caused the accident, but the damages question is separate. What your medical treatment will cost over time, how your injury affects your earning capacity, and what pain and suffering are worth all require separate analysis. An insurer whose liability is not in dispute still has strong financial motivation to minimize what they pay on damages, and a lawyer protects against that dynamic.
Why do I need a lawyer if I have insurance?
Your own insurance covers your initial economic losses through PIP, but it does not cover pain and suffering, and it does not negotiate your recovery from the at-fault driver's insurer on your behalf. No-fault PIP pays medical bills and some lost wages. Recovering full compensation for a serious injury requires meeting legal thresholds, presenting documentation that supports your claim, and pushing back against insurer tactics. That process goes better with legal representation.
What if my injuries seem minor at first?
Some injuries that feel manageable in the first days after a crash turn out to require extended treatment. Soft-tissue injuries, concussions, and herniated discs in particular may not reveal their full severity immediately. Accepting a settlement before that picture is clear forecloses your ability to seek additional compensation later. A free consultation costs nothing and gives you an honest assessment of your situation before you make decisions that cannot be undone.
Can a lawyer help if the other driver had no insurance?
Yes. New York requires uninsured motorist coverage in all auto policies, and there are additional avenues through the Motor Vehicle Accident Indemnification Corporation for victims of hit-and-run or uninsured drivers. These claims involve different procedures and deadlines than standard liability claims, and getting them right requires familiarity with how UM coverage and MVAIC interact. A lawyer who handles these regularly knows how to coordinate recovery from all available sources.
How is a car accident lawyer paid?
Most personal injury attorneys, including the Porter Law Group, work on a contingency fee basis. There are no upfront costs and no fees during the case. The attorney is paid a percentage of the recovery if the case is successful. If there is no recovery, you owe nothing. This makes legal representation accessible regardless of your financial situation immediately after an accident.
What if the insurer makes a settlement offer quickly?
Early settlement offers from insurers should be treated with caution. They are often made before the full extent of your injuries is known, before future treatment costs can be estimated, and before a lawyer has had the chance to evaluate what you are actually entitled to under the law. Accepting an early offer and signing a release ends your ability to seek additional compensation, regardless of what happens next with your health or your financial situation. An attorney can evaluate any offer against what the case is actually worth.
Does hiring a lawyer mean my case will go to trial?
Not necessarily. Most car accident cases settle before trial. But having an attorney who is willing and experienced enough to take a case to trial changes the settlement dynamic. Insurers make higher offers when they know the opposing lawyer has real trial capability, because the alternative to settling is a jury verdict that could be substantially higher. Trial experience is protective even in cases that resolve out of court.
Summing It Up
The insurance and legal systems that govern car accident claims in New York are not designed to give you everything you are entitled to without effort. They are complex, deadline-driven, and navigated daily by professionals on the insurer's side whose job is to limit payouts.
Hiring a car accident lawyer levels that dynamic. It means your claim is built on complete medical documentation, that every eligible source of recovery is identified, that insurer tactics are met with informed resistance, and that settlement negotiations are grounded in what the law actually allows rather than what the adjuster volunteers.
The Porter Law Group handles car accident cases across New York on a contingency basis. Consultations are free and carry no obligation. If you were seriously injured in a car accident and you want to understand where you actually stand, that conversation costs you nothing.







