Georgia
Motorcycle Accident Laws in Georgia (2026): Deadlines & Helmets

A motorcycle crash in Georgia is handled under the same core tort rules as a car wreck, but several details matter more for riders: a universal helmet law, a fault system that bars recovery at 50 percent, and the fact that Georgia is an at-fault state with no no-fault safety net. This guide walks through the Georgia rules that shape a motorcycle-injury or wrongful-death claim, starting with the filing deadline and how shared fault is counted, then the helmet and lane rules that are specific to riders. It is general information, not legal advice.
This page is part of our Motorcycle Accident Laws by State series. Deadlines are firm and every crash is different, so treat the figures below as a starting point and confirm the current law before relying on it.
The Georgia deadline to sue (statute of limitations)
The first thing to protect after a motorcycle crash in Georgia is the deadline. A personal-injury lawsuit must generally be filed within two years of the date of the crash under O.C.G.A. 9-3-33, which sets a two-year limit for injuries to the person. A wrongful-death action carries the same two-year period, measured from the date of death. There are narrow exceptions, including tolling for injured minors and situations where a related criminal case briefly pauses the civil clock, but the default is two years and courts enforce it strictly.
The two-year clock generally starts on the date of the crash, not the date treatment ends or an insurance claim resolves. Because these rules are unforgiving, the safe assumption after any Georgia motorcycle crash is that a two-year clock is already running.
How Georgia splits fault: modified comparative negligence
Georgia follows modified comparative negligence under O.C.G.A. 51-12-33. A jury assigns each party a percentage of fault, the injured person's recovery is reduced by their own percentage, and recovery is barred entirely if the injured person is 50 percent or more at fault. A rider found 30 percent at fault recovers 70 percent of the damages, but a rider found 50 percent at fault recovers nothing. The statute also directs the jury to apportion fault among everyone who contributed to the crash, including parties not named in the suit.
This matters in motorcycle cases because insurers often try to push the rider's share toward the 50 percent line, sometimes leaning on stereotypes about speed or risk-taking. Clear evidence that the other driver caused the crash, covered below, is what keeps the rider's share under the bar.
No-fault and insurance in Georgia
Georgia is not a no-fault state. It uses a traditional at-fault, or tort, system, so the driver who caused the crash and that driver's insurer are responsible for the harm, and there is no no-fault threshold an injured rider must clear before suing. That generally simplifies a motorcycle claim compared with no-fault states, because the rider pursues the at-fault driver directly from the start.

Georgia's minimum auto and motorcycle liability limits are 25/50/25: $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $25,000 for property damage. Those limits can be small relative to the harm a serious motorcycle crash causes, which is why a rider's own uninsured/underinsured-motorist coverage is often the most important policy when the at-fault driver carries only the minimum.
Georgia's helmet law
Georgia has a universal helmet law. Under O.C.G.A. 40-6-315, every motorcycle operator and passenger must wear protective headgear that meets the standards set by the commissioner of public safety, which follow Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard 218 (the DOT standard). The requirement applies regardless of age. Eye protection is also required for any rider whose motorcycle is not equipped with a windshield. The Georgia Department of Driver Services reflects these requirements in its motorcycle operator materials.
Can the helmet question reduce your damages?
Because a helmet is mandatory for every rider in Georgia, an injured motorcyclist who was not wearing one is in a different position than a rider in a state where going helmetless is legal. A defendant can argue that the rider's own conduct, riding without the required helmet, contributed to head, neck, or facial injuries, and Georgia's apportionment statute allows a jury to weigh that as part of the rider's percentage of fault. The argument is typically limited to injuries a helmet could realistically have prevented; injuries to the legs, spine, arms, or internal organs are generally unrelated to helmet use, and medical evidence can separate them. Whether and how much a missing helmet affects a claim depends on the specific injuries and how fault is apportioned.
Lane splitting in Georgia
Lane splitting, riding a motorcycle between lanes of traffic, is not permitted in Georgia. State law entitles a motorcycle to full use of a lane, and O.C.G.A. 40-6-312 prohibits operating between lanes or between adjacent rows of vehicles. A rider who lane splits can be cited and is exposed to a larger share of fault if a crash results, which under Georgia's modified comparative-negligence rule can reduce or, at 50 percent or more, bar recovery. California remains the only state that has expressly legalized lane splitting; Georgia is not among the states that allow even limited filtering.

Damage caps
Georgia does not cap compensatory damages in an ordinary motorcycle-injury or wrongful-death case, so medical bills, lost earnings, and pain and suffering are generally not subject to a statutory ceiling. Georgia's former cap on noneconomic damages in medical-malpractice cases was struck down by the state supreme court and does not apply to vehicle-crash cases. Punitive damages are a separate category with their own statutory limits, but those apply only where punitive damages are sought, not to ordinary compensatory recovery.
Why motorcycle cases are different
Motorcycle crashes tend to produce more severe injuries than car crashes because a rider has no surrounding cabin, and the Georgia-specific factors above stack on top of that: a universal helmet law, a 50 percent fault bar, and juries that can carry bias against riders. Each of those is a reason that careful documentation of how the crash actually happened, and of the full extent of the injuries, can change the outcome of a claim.
Evidence and how to evaluate a claim
The strongest evidence in a motorcycle case is often gathered in the first days. The police crash report, photographs of the scene, the vehicles, and the rider's gear, the helmet itself, witness contact information, and complete medical records all help establish both fault and the severity of the harm. Most personal-injury lawyers in Georgia work on a contingency fee, meaning the fee is a percentage of any recovery with usually no upfront cost, and most offer a free initial consultation. No lawyer can promise a specific result or dollar figure, because the outcome depends on liability, the available insurance, the comparative-fault split, and the harm actually proven. The practical points are clear: a two-year clock is running, the evidence is perishable, and pinning down the facts early protects the case.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to sue after a motorcycle accident in Georgia?
Generally two years. O.C.G.A. 9-3-33 gives an injured person two years from the date of the crash to file a personal-injury lawsuit, and a wrongful-death claim carries the same two-year period measured from the date of death. There are narrow tolling exceptions, for example for injured minors, but Georgia courts enforce the two-year deadline strictly, so confirm your specific deadline early.
Is failing to wear a helmet going to hurt my case in Georgia?
It can. Georgia has a universal helmet law (O.C.G.A. 40-6-315), so every rider must wear a DOT-approved helmet. If you were not wearing one, a defendant can argue that contributed to head, neck, or facial injuries, and a jury may weigh it as part of your share of fault under Georgia's apportionment rule. The argument is limited to injuries a helmet could realistically have prevented, so injuries to the legs, spine, or internal organs are generally unaffected.
Is lane splitting legal in Georgia?
No. Lane splitting, riding between lanes of traffic, is not permitted in Georgia and is prohibited by O.C.G.A. 40-6-312. A rider who lane splits can be ticketed and may be assigned a larger share of fault if a crash results, which under Georgia's modified comparative-negligence rule can reduce or, at 50 percent or more, bar recovery.
How much is a motorcycle accident case worth?
There is no set figure and no one can honestly promise an amount. Value depends on the severity of the injuries, the medical bills and lost income, the available insurance (including your own uninsured/underinsured-motorist coverage), and your share of fault under Georgia's modified comparative-negligence rule. Georgia does not cap compensatory damages in ordinary crash cases, but the actual recovery still turns on the proof in your specific case.
Injured in Georgia? Get a free case review from a personal-injury attorney
If someone else's negligence caused your injury, you may be owed compensation for medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Get a free, no-obligation review from a Georgia personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- Georgia General Assembly, Official Code of Georgia Annotated O.C.G.A. 9-3-33 (two-year limitation for injuries to the person) and O.C.G.A. 51-12-33 (comparative fault; 50 percent bar)(legis.ga.gov).gov
- Georgia Department of Driver Services, Motorcycle Operator Manual (DOT helmet and eye-protection requirements under O.C.G.A. 40-6-315)(dds.georgia.gov).gov
- Georgia Department of Driver Services, Get Your Georgia Motorcycle License (Class M endorsement and rider requirements)(dds.georgia.gov).gov
- Georgia Office of Commissioner of Insurance and Safety Fire, Auto Insurance (25/50/25 minimum liability requirement)(oci.georgia.gov).gov