District of Columbia
Truck Accident Laws in Washington, D.C. (2026): Deadlines & Liability

A wreck with a commercial truck is not just a larger car accident. The truck is governed by a layer of federal safety rules, the company behind the driver is almost always part of the case, and the insurance involved dwarfs a normal car policy. The District of Columbia adds two wrinkles most places do not: it is one of the very few jurisdictions that still follows strict contributory negligence, and it runs an optional no-fault system a driver can elect after a crash. This guide explains the D.C. rules that shape a truck-injury or wrongful-death claim, then the uniform federal trucking rules that apply on every interstate route. It is general information, not legal advice.
This page is part of our Truck Accident Laws by State series. Deadlines are strict and every crash is different, so use the figures below as a starting point and confirm the current law before relying on it.
The D.C. deadlines to sue (statute of limitations)
For a personal-injury claim, the District gives an injured person three years from the date of injury to file suit. There is no separate motor-vehicle deadline; a negligence claim falls under the three-year catch-all in D.C. Code 12-301(a)(8), which covers actions for which a limitation is not otherwise specially prescribed.
Wrongful death is shorter. A wrongful-death action must be brought by the personal representative of the deceased within two years of the date of death under D.C. Code 16-2702. The two-year clock runs from the death, which can fall on a different date than the crash. Because of the gap between the three-year injury deadline and the two-year death deadline, the safe approach is to treat the two-year clock as controlling whenever someone has died.
How D.C. handles fault: pure contributory negligence
This is the rule that makes the District different from almost every state. Washington, D.C. follows pure contributory negligence: if the injured person's own negligence contributed to the crash at all, even slightly, recovery is generally barred completely. There is no reduction by percentage as there would be in a comparative-fault state; a small share of fault can defeat the entire claim. D.C. courts have long applied this rule, and federal courts sitting in the District have summarized it the same way in cases such as Krombein v. Gali Service Industries, Inc..
There is one important carve-out. Under the Vulnerable User Collision Recovery Amendment, codified at D.C. Code 50-2204.52, a pedestrian, bicyclist, scooter rider, or similar vulnerable user is not barred by ordinary contributory negligence; instead a comparative rule applies, and that user can recover unless his or her negligence was greater than the combined negligence of the defendants. That exception helps people on foot or on two wheels, but it does not change the harsh contributory-negligence rule for an occupant of a car or another truck.
Because any fault attributed to the injured person can be fatal to the claim, evidence that the truck driver or carrier broke a federal safety rule, discussed below, is especially important in the District.
No-fault and insurance in D.C.
The District has an optional, or elective, no-fault system rather than a mandatory one. Under D.C. Code 31-2405, an injured person can choose to receive personal-injury-protection (PIP) benefits from his or her own insurer to cover medical expenses and lost wages, but that election must be made within 60 days of the accident. Electing PIP can restrict the right to sue the at-fault party: a person who takes PIP benefits may generally sue for noneconomic damages only if the injury meets a statutory threshold, such as substantial permanent scarring or disfigurement, substantial permanent impairment affecting daily or professional activities, an impairment lasting more than 180 continuous days, or medical and rehabilitation expenses (or work loss) that exceed the available PIP benefits.

The practical point for a truck case is twofold. First, you are not forced into no-fault; you can decline PIP and preserve the right to sue. Second, the injuries in a serious tractor-trailer crash usually clear the statutory threshold anyway, so the right to sue the at-fault trucker is typically available, but the 60-day election rule is a real deadline that should be considered early.
D.C.'s minimum auto-liability limits are 25/50/10: $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $10,000 for property damage, with uninsured-motorist coverage also required. Those amounts are small next to the harm a loaded tractor-trailer can cause, which is why the federal trucking insurance minimum below is so important.
Damage caps in D.C.
The District does not cap compensatory damages in an ordinary personal-injury or wrongful-death truck case, so economic damages (medical bills, lost earnings) and noneconomic damages (pain and suffering) are not subject to a statutory limit. The dominant limit on recovery in D.C. is not a damage cap at all; it is the contributory-negligence rule described above, which can bar recovery entirely rather than merely reduce it.
Federal trucking rules: the FMCSA layer
Interstate commercial trucks are regulated by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, and its rules in Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations apply on every interstate route, the District included. The rules that matter most after a crash are:
- Hours of service (49 CFR Part 395): a property-carrying driver may drive at most 11 hours after 10 consecutive hours off duty, may not drive beyond the 14th hour after coming on duty, must take a 30-minute break after 8 hours of driving, and is capped at 60 hours in 7 days or 70 hours in 8 days. Fatigue-rule violations are a leading cause of serious truck crashes.
- Electronic logging devices (ELDs): most drivers must record their duty status with an ELD, which makes the hours-of-service data far harder to falsify and a key piece of evidence.
- Driver qualification and CDL (49 CFR Part 391): the carrier must confirm the driver is qualified, medically fit, and properly licensed.
- Drug and alcohol testing (49 CFR Part 382): pre-employment, random, and post-accident testing is required.
- Inspection and maintenance (49 CFR Part 396): the carrier must systematically inspect, repair, and maintain its vehicles and keep records.
A documented violation of any of these rules can be powerful evidence of negligence, which is why the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulations are central to a truck case, and which matters even more in a contributory-negligence jurisdiction where keeping fault off the injured person is essential.
Who can be held liable after a truck crash
A truck case routinely has more than one defendant, and several of them are companies. Potential defendants include the driver; the motor carrier, which is usually responsible for its driver's on-the-job conduct and can also be sued directly for negligent hiring, training, supervision, or maintenance; a freight broker or shipper; the company that loaded or secured the cargo if a load shift caused the crash; and a manufacturer if a defective brake, tire, or other part failed. Sorting out which entities are responsible is one of the main reasons truck cases are more complex than car cases.

Federal minimum insurance: $750,000 and up
Federal law requires far more coverage from interstate trucking companies than states require from ordinary drivers. Under 49 CFR 387.9, a for-hire carrier of general freight in interstate commerce must maintain at least $750,000 in public-liability coverage, and carriers hauling hazardous materials must carry up to $5,000,000. That is the financial reality behind why truck-crash claims are valued and defended so differently from the 25/50/10 minimum that applies to a typical D.C. car.
Preserving the evidence before it disappears
Much of the best evidence in a truck case lives inside the truck and the carrier's files, and a lot of it can be overwritten or routinely discarded. ELD and logbook data, the engine control module (the truck's onboard "black box," which can record speed, braking, and throttle), dashcam footage, dispatch records, and maintenance files can all be lost within weeks. Because of that, a written preservation or spoliation letter sent to the carrier early, demanding that it keep this data, can make a decisive difference. The police crash report, photographs, and your medical records should be preserved on your side as well.
How injury cases are typically handled
Most personal-injury and wrongful-death lawyers in the District work on a contingency fee, meaning the fee is a percentage of any recovery and there is usually no upfront charge, and most offer a free initial consultation. No lawyer can promise a particular result or dollar amount, because the outcome turns on liability, the contributory-negligence rule, the available insurance, any PIP election, and the harm actually proven. The practical takeaways are simple: several clocks are running (three years for injury, two for wrongful death, and 60 days to decide on PIP), the contributory-negligence rule makes fault attribution critical, the evidence inside the truck is perishable, and the sooner the facts are pinned down, the stronger the record will be.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to sue for a truck accident in Washington, D.C.?
It depends on the claim. The District gives you three years from the date of injury to file a personal-injury lawsuit under D.C. Code 12-301(a)(8), but a wrongful-death claim must be filed within just two years of the date of death under D.C. Code 16-2702. There is also a separate 60-day deadline to elect personal-injury-protection (PIP) benefits, so confirm your specific deadlines early.
Who can be sued after a truck accident in D.C.?
Often several parties. The truck driver, the motor carrier (for its driver's conduct and for negligent hiring, training, supervision, or maintenance), a freight broker or shipper, the company that loaded or secured the cargo, and the manufacturer of a defective part can each be liable. Truck cases frequently involve multiple corporate defendants, which is a key difference from a car-accident case.
How is a truck accident different from a car accident?
Three big ways. Interstate trucks must follow federal FMCSA safety rules (hours of service, electronic logs, driver qualification, drug testing, maintenance) whose violations are evidence of negligence; the trucking company and other businesses are usually defendants, not just the driver; and federal law requires at least $750,000 in liability coverage, far above an ordinary car policy. The truck's electronic data must also be preserved quickly before it is overwritten.
How much is a D.C. truck accident case worth?
There is no set figure and no one can promise an amount. Value depends on the severity of the injuries, the medical bills and lost income, the available insurance, and the fault analysis. Crucially, D.C.'s pure contributory-negligence rule can bar recovery entirely if the injured person is even partly at fault, so liability is often the central issue. D.C. does not cap compensatory damages, but the actual recovery still depends on the proof in your specific case.
Is Washington, D.C. a no-fault state for truck accidents?
D.C. has an optional, or elective, no-fault system rather than a mandatory one. You can choose to take personal-injury-protection (PIP) benefits from your own insurer, but you must elect within 60 days of the crash, and taking PIP can limit your right to sue unless your injuries meet a statutory threshold (D.C. Code 31-2405). You are not forced into no-fault, and serious truck injuries usually clear the threshold, so the right to sue the at-fault trucker is typically preserved.
Sources and References
- D.C. Law Library, D.C. Code 12-301 (Limitation of time for bringing actions): 12-301(a)(8) (3-year catch-all limitation governing negligence/personal-injury actions)(code.dccouncil.gov).gov
- D.C. Law Library, D.C. Code 16-2702 (Party plaintiff; statute of limitations; wrongful-death action must be brought within 2 years of death)(code.dccouncil.gov).gov
- D.C. Law Library, D.C. Code 31-2405 (Compulsory/No-Fault Motor Vehicle Insurance: optional PIP benefits, 60-day election, and statutory threshold to maintain a tort action)(code.dccouncil.gov).gov
- D.C. Law Library, D.C. Code 50-2204.52 (Vulnerable User Collision Recovery: comparative-negligence exception for pedestrians, cyclists, and other vulnerable users to the District's pure contributory-negligence rule)(code.dccouncil.gov).gov
- CourtListener, Krombein v. Gali Service Industries, Inc. (D.D.C.) summarizing the District of Columbia's pure contributory-negligence rule barring recovery for a plaintiff partly at fault(courtlistener.com)
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations, 49 CFR Part 395 (Hours of Service of Drivers); also Part 391 (driver qualification), Part 382 (drug/alcohol testing), Part 396 (inspection and maintenance)(ecfr.gov).gov
- Electronic Code of Federal Regulations, 49 CFR 387.9 (minimum levels of financial responsibility; $750,000 general freight, up to $5,000,000 hazardous materials)(ecfr.gov).gov
- Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, Regulations (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations overview, hours of service, ELDs, driver qualification, maintenance)(fmcsa.dot.gov).gov