
Truck Accident Laws by State (2026): Deadlines & Liability
How truck accident claims work, plus a state-by-state guide to the deadline to sue, the fault rule, and no-fault status, with the federal FMCSA rules and who
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How truck accident claims work, plus a state-by-state guide to the deadline to sue, the fault rule, and no-fault status, with the federal FMCSA rules and who

Alabama truck accident law: 2-year deadline, strict contributory negligence, no no-fault, plus the FMCSA rules and $750,000 federal insurance behind liability.

Alaska truck accident law: 2-year deadline, pure comparative negligence, no no-fault, plus the FMCSA rules and $750,000 federal insurance behind liability.

Arizona truck accident law: 2-year deadline, pure comparative negligence, no no-fault, no damage caps, plus FMCSA rules and $750,000 federal insurance.

Arkansas gives 3 years to file a truck-accident injury or wrongful-death claim. The state uses a modified comparative-fault 50% bar, plus federal FMCSA rules.

California gives 2 years to file a truck-accident injury or wrongful-death claim. The state uses pure comparative fault, plus federal FMCSA rules.

Colorado allows 3 years to file a truck-accident injury claim, 2 for wrongful death. It uses a modified comparative-fault 50% bar, plus federal FMCSA rules.

Connecticut allows 2 years to sue after a truck accident and uses a 51% modified comparative negligence rule. Learn the deadlines, liability, and FMCSA rules.

Delaware allows 2 years to sue after a truck accident and uses a 51% modified comparative negligence rule. Learn the deadlines, the role of PIP, and liability.

Florida now allows 2 years to sue after a truck accident and uses a 51% modified comparative rule. Learn the no-fault PIP threshold, liability, and FMCSA rules.

Georgia truck accident law: the 2-year deadline to sue, the 50% comparative negligence bar, who can be liable, FMCSA rules, and the $750,000 federal minimum.

Hawaii truck accident law: the 2-year deadline, the 51% negligence bar, the no-fault/PIP threshold to sue, FMCSA rules, and the $750,000 federal minimum.

Idaho truck accident law: the 2-year deadline to sue, the 50% negligence bar, Idaho's noneconomic damages cap, FMCSA rules, and the $750,000 federal minimum.

Illinois truck accident law: the 2-year deadline to sue, the comparative negligence bar, who can be liable, FMCSA rules, and the $750,000 insurance minimum.

Indiana truck accident law: the 2-year deadline to sue, the comparative fault bar, who can be liable, FMCSA rules, and the $750,000 insurance minimum.

Iowa truck accident law: the 2-year deadline to sue, the comparative fault bar, who can be liable, FMCSA rules, and the $750,000 insurance minimum.

Kansas truck accident law: the 2-year deadline, modified comparative (50%) fault, no-fault PIP and the tort threshold, plus FMCSA rules and who is liable.

Kentucky truck accident law: the filing deadline, pure comparative fault, the choice no-fault (PIP) tort threshold, plus federal FMCSA rules and who is liable.

Louisiana truck accident law: the 2-year injury prescription, updated wrongful-death deadlines, the 2026 modified comparative fault (51%) shift, plus federal

Maine truck accident guide: a 6-year injury deadline (14 MRS 752), Maine's modified comparative negligence rule, at-fault insurance, and FMCSA trucking rules.

Maryland truck accident guide: a 3-year filing deadline (CJP 5-101), the state's strict contributory negligence rule, at-fault insurance, and FMCSA rules.

Massachusetts truck accident guide: a 3-year deadline (MGL c.260 s.2A), the no-fault tort threshold to sue, the 51% comparative fault rule, and FMCSA rules.

Michigan gives truck-crash victims 3 years to sue. Learn the no-fault threshold, comparative-fault rule, FMCSA rules, and who can be held liable.

Minnesota gives injury victims 6 years to sue after a truck crash. Learn the no-fault tort threshold, 51% fault bar, FMCSA rules, and who can be held liable.

Mississippi gives truck-crash victims 3 years to sue and uses pure comparative fault. Learn the at-fault rule, FMCSA rules, and who can be liable.

Missouri gives truck-crash victims 5 years to sue and uses pure comparative fault. Learn the at-fault rule, FMCSA regulations, and who can be liable.

Montana gives truck-crash victims 3 years to sue and uses modified comparative fault (51% bar). Learn the at-fault rule, FMCSA rules, and who can be liable.

Nebraska gives truck-crash victims 4 years to sue and uses a strict 50% comparative-fault bar. Learn the at-fault rule, FMCSA rules, and who can be liable.

Nevada truck accident law: 2-year deadline, modified comparative negligence (51% bar), at-fault system, plus the FMCSA rules and $750,000 federal insurance.

New Hampshire truck accident law: 3-year deadline, modified comparative fault (51% bar), at-fault system, plus the FMCSA rules and $750,000 federal insurance.

New Jersey truck accident law: 2-year deadline, modified comparative negligence, the choice no-fault verbal threshold, plus FMCSA rules and $750,000 insurance.

New Mexico gives 3 years to sue after a truck accident and uses pure comparative negligence. Learn the deadline, who is liable, and the federal FMCSA rules.

New York gives 3 years to sue after a truck accident and uses pure comparative negligence. Learn the no-fault serious-injury threshold, liability, and FMCSA.

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.

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.

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

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

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

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.

Vermont gives truck-crash victims 3 years to sue. Learn the 51% comparative-fault bar, at-fault rules, FMCSA regulations, and who can be held liable.

Virginia truck accident guide: the 2-year filing deadline (Va. Code 8.01-243), the strict contributory negligence rule, at-fault insurance, and FMCSA rules.

Washington truck accident guide: a 3-year filing deadline (RCW 4.16.080), the state's pure comparative negligence rule, at-fault insurance, and FMCSA rules.

Washington, D.C. gives 3 years to file a truck-injury claim, 2 for wrongful death. It follows pure contributory negligence with an elective no-fault PIP option.

West Virginia truck accident guide: a 2-year filing deadline (W. Va. Code 55-2-12), modified comparative negligence, at-fault insurance, and FMCSA rules.

Wisconsin allows 3 years to file a truck-injury claim, 2 for a motor-vehicle wrongful death. It uses a modified-comparative 51% bar, plus federal FMCSA rules.

Wyoming allows 4 years to file a truck-injury claim, 2 for wrongful death. It uses a modified-comparative 51% bar and bans damage caps, plus FMCSA rules.