PENNSYLVANIA LEGAL GUIDE

How Personal Injury Claim Works in Pennsylvania

What to expect after an injury — preserving evidence, dealing with insurance, demand letters, lawsuits, and how settlements get calculated.

Typical timeline

6 months – 2 years

Fastest path

60 days (clear liability, soft-tissue injury)

Filing fee

Varies by county

PA venue

State + county court

Overview

Personal Injury Claim in Pennsylvania, in plain English

A personal injury claim is a civil demand for compensation after someone else's negligence causes you harm — car crashes, slip-and-falls, medical malpractice, dog bites, and defective products are the most common categories.

Most claims settle directly with an insurance carrier and never reach a courtroom. Cases that do go to suit usually settle before trial. The lawyer's job is to value the claim, document it, and negotiate from a position of strength.

What follows is the Pennsylvania-specific version of the personal injury claim process — including the rules that most often surprise people, and the typical timeline and cost ranges you should plan for.

The Legal Process

Step-by-step: personal injury claim in Pennsylvania

Each step below shows the typical Pennsylvania sequence and how long it takes. Steps may overlap; complex cases add discovery and motion practice.

  1. 1

    Medical treatment & evidence

    Day 1 onward

    Get treated. Preserve photos, witness contact info, police/incident reports, and damaged property.

  2. 2

    Retain counsel

    1–2 weeks

    Most personal injury attorneys work on contingency — no fee unless you recover. Sign a fee agreement and a HIPAA release.

  3. 3

    Investigation & medical records

    2–6 months

    Counsel orders records, bills, and any expert opinions. The case is documented while you continue treatment.

  4. 4

    Demand letter

    30–60 days from MMI

    After you reach maximum medical improvement, counsel sends a detailed demand to the insurer with damages, medicals, and legal theory.

  5. 5

    Negotiation

    1–3 months

    Insurer responds with a counter. Most cases resolve in 1–3 rounds of negotiation.

  6. 6

    File suit (if needed)

    Statute of limitations: 1–6 yrs

    If the insurer's offer is inadequate, counsel files a complaint and serves the defendant.

  7. 7

    Discovery, mediation, trial

    12–24 months

    Depositions, expert reports, mediation, and (rarely) trial. Most lawsuits settle at or before mediation.

Costs

What personal injury claim costs in Pennsylvania

Personal injury work is almost always contingency-based: typically 33⅓% of the recovery pre-suit, 40% after suit is filed, plus reimbursement of case costs.

Contingency fee (pre-suit)
33⅓%
Contingency fee (after suit)
40%
Case costs (records, experts, filing)
$500 – $50,000+
Out-of-pocket from you
$0
Statute of limitations (typical)
1 – 6 years

Ranges are typical Pennsylvania figures. Your matter's complexity, contested issues, and counsel's experience all move the number.

Attorney Recommendations

Verified Pennsylvania Personal Injury attorneys

Featured attorneys with active Pennsylvania licenses and personal injury practice experience. Each offers a consultation to discuss your matter.

FAQs

Personal Injury Claim in Pennsylvania — common questions

How is my claim worth?
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Value = medical bills + lost wages + property damage + pain and suffering, adjusted for liability, available insurance, and your jurisdiction's verdict history. Counsel uses comparable verdicts and settlements to anchor demand.
How long do I have to file?
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The statute of limitations varies by state and claim type, typically 1–6 years. Some claims (medical malpractice, claims against government) have much shorter notice deadlines.
Should I talk to the insurance company?
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Notify your own carrier immediately. Do not give a recorded statement to the other side's insurer before consulting counsel — anything you say can and will be used to reduce your claim.
What if I was partly at fault?
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Depends on your state. Pure comparative negligence reduces your recovery by your % of fault. Modified comparative bars recovery if you are 50% or 51%+ at fault. A few states still follow pure contributory negligence — even 1% fault bars recovery.