
Truck Accident Laws in Utah (2026): Deadlines & Liability
Utah gives truck-crash victims 4 years to sue. Learn the $3,000 no-fault PIP threshold, the 50% comparative-fault bar, FMCSA rules, and who can be liable.
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Utah gives truck-crash victims 4 years to sue. Learn the $3,000 no-fault PIP threshold, the 50% comparative-fault bar, FMCSA rules, and who can be liable.

Texas gives truck-crash victims 2 years to sue. Learn the 51% proportionate-responsibility bar, FMCSA rules, the $750k insurance floor, and who can be liable.

Tennessee truck accident law: the 1-year deadline to sue, the 49% modified comparative fault rule, who can be liable, FMCSA rules, and the $750k minimum.

South Dakota truck accident law: the 3-year deadline to sue, the unusual slight/gross negligence rule, who can be liable, FMCSA rules, and the $750k minimum.

South Carolina truck accident law: the 3-year deadline to sue, the 51% comparative negligence bar, who can be liable, FMCSA rules, and the $750k minimum.

Rhode Island gives 3 years to sue after a truck accident and uses pure comparative negligence. Learn the deadline, fault rule, liability, and FMCSA rules.

Pennsylvania gives 2 years to sue after a truck accident, uses a 51% rule, and is a choice no-fault state. Learn limited vs. full tort and FMCSA rules.

Oregon gives 2 years to sue after a truck accident and uses a modified comparative rule. Learn the deadline, fault rule, PIP, liability, and FMCSA rules.

Oklahoma truck accident law: 2-year deadline, modified 51% comparative negligence, at-fault (no no-fault), plus FMCSA rules and the $750k federal truck

Ohio truck accident law: 2-year deadline, modified 51% comparative negligence, at-fault (no no-fault), plus FMCSA rules and the $750,000 federal truck

North Dakota truck accident law: 6-year injury deadline, modified 50% comparative rule, and a no-fault PIP threshold ($2,500 medical) you must clear to sue.

North Carolina gives 3 years to sue after a truck accident but uses harsh contributory negligence. Learn the deadline, the 1% fault bar, liability, and FMCSA.