Legal Options Hub
Georgia · personal injury

Georgia Personal Injury Lawyer — Deadlines, Penalties, Costs, and What to Do Next

If you need a personal injury lawyer in Atlanta, Savannah, Augusta, Columbus, the rules below decide your case. Start with a free private review or compare verified attorneys before talking to insurance, prosecution, or opposing counsel.

We may be compensated if you connect with a legal-service partner through this page. Legal Options Hub is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice; consult a licensed Georgia attorney for advice specific to your case.

Georgia personal injury law — what determines case value

Georgia's Anti-Indemnity Statute makes many waiver-of-liability clauses unenforceable. Negligent security cases (a category Georgia courts treat seriously) have produced very large verdicts in Fulton, DeKalb, and Cobb counties.

Statute of limitations

2 years from the date of injury. Once expired, courts dismiss claims regardless of merit. Government defendant claims, minor's claims, and wrongful death have separate, often shorter, notice and filing deadlines.

Georgia fault rule

Georgia uses modified comparative fault with a 50% bar (stricter than the 51% bar used in most states). This single rule decides whether you recover anything and how much. Insurance defense lawyers in Georgia fight for fault percentages aggressively because shifting even 10% changes settlement value by tens of thousands.

Damage caps in Georgia

no cap on personal injury damages; the GA Supreme Court struck down med-mal caps in 2010 (Atlanta Oculoplastic Surgery v. Nestlehutt).

Common Georgia personal injury case types

What Georgia personal injury cases settle for

Settlement values depend heavily on injury severity, liability clarity, available insurance limits, jurisdiction, and lawyer experience. Georgia ranges based on published verdict and settlement data:

How Georgia personal injury lawyers get paid

Standard contingency: 33⅓% if settled before lawsuit; 40% after filing; 45% through trial and appeal. Plus case expenses (expert witnesses, depositions, filing fees, medical record requests) typically $3,000–$50,000+ depending on case complexity, advanced by the firm and reimbursed from settlement.

What to do in the first 30 days

  1. Get medical care immediately and follow every treatment recommendation.
  2. Photograph the scene, injuries, and any visible evidence.
  3. Get the official accident report or incident report.
  4. Identify and contact witnesses while memories are fresh.
  5. Preserve all evidence including damaged property, clothing, vehicles.
  6. Do NOT give a recorded statement to the other party's insurance without legal counsel.
  7. Do NOT accept any settlement offer in the first 30–60 days.
  8. Do NOT post anything on social media that could be used to dispute your injuries.
  9. Consult a Georgia personal injury lawyer — most offer free initial consultations.

FAQ — Georgia personal injury claims

How long do Georgia personal injury cases take?

Typical timeline: 6–18 months for clear-liability soft-tissue cases that settle pre-suit; 18–36 months for cases that require litigation; 3–5 years for catastrophic or contested cases. Georgia court backlogs vary by county.

Do I have to go to court?

Most Georgia personal injury cases (90%+) settle before trial. Even after a lawsuit is filed, most resolve at mediation or pretrial.

What if I was partly at fault?

Under Georgia's fault rule (modified comparative fault with a 50% bar (stricter than the 51% bar used in most states)), partial fault changes the analysis. An experienced lawyer can challenge the insurer's fault apportionment, which is often less favorable to you than what a jury would find.

What if the at-fault party has no insurance?

Your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage steps in for auto cases. For non-auto cases, options include suing the individual directly or pursuing employers, contractors, or property owners with deeper pockets.

What does it cost to talk to a Georgia personal injury lawyer?

Nothing. Georgia personal injury lawyers virtually always offer free initial consultations and work on contingency.

Free, private Georgia case review

Submit basic details and a Georgia-area legal-service pathway can review your situation at no cost.

Georgia cities and counties we route requests for

Atlanta, Savannah, Augusta, Columbus, Macon, Athens, and surrounding metro areas. If your matter is in a smaller Georgia county, intake routes to the nearest experienced Georgia personal injury firm with that county's court experience.