Rhode Island
Truck Accident Laws in Rhode Island (2026): Deadlines & Liability

A wreck with a tractor-trailer is not just a larger car accident. A fully loaded commercial truck can outweigh a passenger car many times over, the injuries are often catastrophic, and the case typically involves a trucking company, federal safety regulations, and multiple potential defendants. If a commercial truck hurt you in Rhode Island, the deadline, the fault rule, and the federal trucking rules all shape your claim from the start.
This page explains Rhode Island's deadline, its negligence rule, and how its auto-insurance system works, then covers the federal trucking rules that apply nationwide. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship.
The Deadline to Sue in Rhode Island
Under R.I. Gen. Laws section 9-1-14, actions for injuries to the person must be commenced within three years after the cause of action accrues. For most truck collisions, that three-year clock runs from the date of the crash. Wrongful death claims are governed by R.I. Gen. Laws section 10-7-2, which generally requires the action to be filed within three years after the death, with a discovery rule for a wrongful act that was not known at the time of death.
Rhode Island's deadlines are strict, and filing late almost always ends the case regardless of its strength. Some situations carry their own rules, such as claims against a governmental entity. Confirming the exact deadline for your situation early is important.
How Rhode Island Divides Fault
Rhode Island follows pure comparative negligence, which is more favorable to injured people than the modified rules used in most states. Under R.I. Gen. Laws section 9-20-4, the fact that the injured person may not have been exercising due care does not bar recovery. Instead, the fact-finder simply reduces the damages in proportion to the amount of negligence attributable to the injured person.
That means there is no percentage cutoff that wipes out your claim. Even a plaintiff found mostly at fault can still recover the remaining share. If your damages are $400,000 and you are 40% at fault, your recovery falls to $240,000. Fault still matters to the size of the recovery, so how it is documented and contested remains important in Rhode Island truck cases, but it does not create the all-or-nothing bar found in states with a 50% or 51% rule.
No-Fault and PIP in Rhode Island
Rhode Island is an at-fault, or tort, state. The driver who causes a crash is responsible for the resulting harm, and there is no serious-injury threshold you must meet before you can sue the at-fault trucker for pain and suffering. That makes Rhode Island simpler at the front end than a true no-fault state. Personal injury protection (PIP) is not the mandatory backbone of the system that it is in no-fault states, though optional medical-payments coverage may be available on a policy.

Damage Caps in Rhode Island
Rhode Island does not cap compensatory damages in an ordinary personal injury or truck-crash case, so you can seek the full measure of economic losses (medical bills, lost income) and non-economic losses (pain, suffering). There is no general statutory cap on these damages for a typical claim against a private trucking company. Confirming whether any limit applies to your specific claim is worthwhile.
Minimum Insurance in Rhode Island
Rhode Island requires ordinary drivers to carry at least $25,000 per person and $50,000 per crash in bodily-injury liability and $25,000 in property-damage liability (drivers may instead carry a combined single limit of at least $75,000). Commercial trucks operating in interstate commerce must meet far higher federal minimums, discussed below, which is one reason a truck case can reach insurance a car case never could.
Federal FMCSA Rules That Shape Truck Cases
Most commercial trucks are governed by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations enforced by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). These rules apply in every state, and a violation is often strong evidence of negligence.

- Hours of service (49 CFR Part 395): A property-carrying driver may drive a maximum of 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 and falsified logs are recurring problems.
- Electronic logging devices (ELDs): Most drivers must run an ELD that automatically records driving time, duty status, and location, which makes hours-of-service violations harder to hide.
- Driver qualification and CDL (49 CFR Part 391): Carriers must confirm that drivers hold the proper commercial driver's license and meet medical and qualification standards, and keep a driver qualification file.
- Drug and alcohol testing (49 CFR Part 382): FMCSA requires pre-employment, random, post-accident, and reasonable-suspicion testing for safety-sensitive drivers.
- Vehicle maintenance and inspection (49 CFR Part 396): Carriers must systematically inspect, repair, and maintain their vehicles and keep records. Brake and tire failures often trace back to skipped maintenance.
Who Can Be Liable After a Truck Accident
A car crash usually means one other driver. A truck crash often involves a chain of businesses, and several of them can share responsibility:
- The driver, for negligent or reckless operation.
- The motor carrier (trucking company), both vicariously for its driver acting in the scope of employment and directly for negligent hiring, training, supervision, or retention.
- A broker or shipper, in some circumstances tied to how the load or carrier was arranged.
- A cargo loader, if an improperly secured or overloaded load contributed to the crash.
- A parts or equipment manufacturer, if a defective brake, tire, or other component failed.
Identifying every responsible party matters because it can open access to multiple insurance policies, a key difference from a typical car-accident case.
Federal Minimum Insurance for Trucks
Under 49 CFR 387.9, for-hire motor carriers operating in interstate commerce and hauling general (non-hazardous) freight in vehicles rated at 10,001 pounds or more must maintain at least $750,000 in liability coverage. Carriers transporting certain oil or hazardous substances must carry $1,000,000, and those hauling certain hazardous materials or explosives in bulk must carry $5,000,000. These federal floors dwarf a typical passenger-car policy, which is part of why truck cases are valued differently from car cases.
Why Preserving Evidence Early Matters
Much of the strongest evidence in a truck case sits inside the truck and the carrier's files. ELD and logbook data, the engine control module (ECM) or onboard event recorder often called the black box, dash-camera footage, and maintenance and inspection records can be overwritten, recycled, or lost on routine schedules. Sending a spoliation, or evidence preservation, letter to the carrier early can require it to hold this data before it is gone. The police report, photographs of the scene and vehicles, and your medical records are also central and should be secured promptly.

How to Evaluate a Truck Accident Claim
Most personal injury attorneys review truck cases on a contingency-fee basis, meaning the fee comes out of any recovery rather than up front, and many offer a free initial consultation. No lawyer can promise a particular outcome or dollar figure, and every case depends on its own facts and evidence. The practical steps stay the same: get medical care and follow through, keep the police report and your records, document your losses, and confirm the exact deadline for your situation, because Rhode Island's deadlines are strict and a missed date usually forfeits the claim.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the deadline to sue for a truck accident in Rhode Island?
Generally 3 years from the date of the crash for a personal injury claim under R.I. Gen. Laws 9-1-14, and generally 3 years from the date of death for wrongful death under R.I. Gen. Laws 10-7-2. Claims against a governmental entity carry their own rules. Filing late almost always ends the claim, so confirm your exact deadline early.
Is Rhode Island a no-fault state for truck accidents?
No. Rhode Island is an at-fault (tort) state, so there is no serious-injury threshold to clear before suing the at-fault trucker for pain and suffering. The driver who caused the crash is responsible for the resulting harm.
What is pure comparative negligence in Rhode Island?
Under R.I. Gen. Laws 9-20-4, your own fault never bars recovery. Your damages are simply reduced in proportion to your share of fault, so even a plaintiff found mostly at fault can still recover the remaining share. There is no 50% or 51% cutoff that wipes out the claim.
Who can be sued after a truck accident in Rhode Island?
Often more than one party: the truck driver, the motor carrier (both for its driver's conduct and for negligent hiring, training, or supervision), and sometimes a broker or shipper, a cargo loader, or the manufacturer of a defective part. Identifying every responsible party can open access to multiple insurance policies.
How is a truck accident different from a car accident?
Trucks are far heavier, so injuries tend to be more severe. Commercial trucks are also governed by federal FMCSA rules on driving hours, logs, maintenance, and licensing, and interstate freight carriers must carry at least $750,000 in liability coverage. Truck cases also typically involve multiple, often corporate, defendants and time-sensitive electronic evidence.
How much is a truck accident case worth in Rhode Island?
There is no set figure. Value depends on the severity of the injuries, medical costs, lost income, the strength of the evidence, and how fault is divided under Rhode Island's pure comparative negligence rule. No attorney can promise a specific outcome or dollar amount, and your recovery is reduced by your share of fault.
Injured in Rhode Island? 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 Rhode Island personal-injury attorney. Most work on contingency, so there is no upfront cost.
Sources and References
- R.I. Gen. Laws 9-1-14, Limitation of actions for words spoken or personal injuries (3-year personal injury limitation)(rilegislature.gov).gov
- R.I. Gen. Laws 10-7-2, Period for bringing wrongful death action (3-year limitation)(rilegislature.gov).gov
- R.I. Gen. Laws 9-20-4, Comparative negligence (pure comparative negligence)(rilegislature.gov).gov
- FMCSA, Summary of Hours of Service Regulations (49 CFR Part 395)(fmcsa.dot.gov).gov
- 49 CFR 387.9, Financial responsibility, minimum levels (the $750,000 minimum for for-hire freight carriers)(law.cornell.edu)
- 49 CFR 396.3, Inspection, repair, and maintenance of commercial motor vehicles(fmcsa.dot.gov).gov