After a truck accident, you're left with major questions and mounting bills. The Washington truck accident lawyers from Strong Law are here to help.
A Washington truck accident lawyer helps injured people after crashes with semi-trucks, tractor-trailers, delivery trucks, box trucks, commercial vehicles, and 18-wheelers. Strong Law Accident & Injury Attorneys helps truck accident victims across Washington seek money for medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, insurance problems, and serious injuries.
Truck accident cases are different from normal car accident cases. The truck driver may not be the only person responsible. Fault may fall on the truck driver, trucking company, cargo loader, repair shop, truck owner, trailer owner, freight broker, or parts maker.
These cases also involve evidence that can disappear fast. Key evidence may include driver logs, black box data, maintenance records, dash camera video, dispatch records, and company files.
Strong Law handles semi truck accident cases, commercial truck accident claims, tractor trailer accident claims, 18 wheeler accident claims, and other trucking accident cases across Washington.
Strong Law helps protect your claim by:
If you were hurt in a truck accident in Washington, Strong Law offers free consultations. You pay no attorney fee unless we recover compensation for you.
Truck accident claims are harder than normal car accident claims because commercial vehicles are bigger, heavier, and tied to business records.
A truck crash may involve:
A passenger vehicle crash may involve one driver and one insurance company. A commercial truck accident can involve several companies, several insurance policies, and evidence that must be saved quickly.
That is why early investigation matters.
Truck accident cases often involve more than one responsible party. A full investigation may show that several people or companies helped cause the crash.
Possible liable parties may include:
A truck driver may be at fault if they were speeding, distracted, impaired, tired, following too closely, changing lanes unsafely, or breaking safety rules.
A trucking company may be at fault if it hired an unsafe driver, skipped training, ignored safety rules, pushed unsafe deadlines, or failed to maintain the truck.
Some trucks and trailers are owned by different companies. The owner may be at fault if poor maintenance or unsafe equipment helped cause the crash.
A repair shop may be at fault if poor repairs, missed inspections, bad brakes, tire problems, or other mechanical issues caused the crash.
Improperly loaded cargo can shift, spill, or make a truck harder to control. A cargo loader may be at fault if unsafe loading caused or worsened the crash.
A broker or shipper may share fault if unsafe choices about the carrier, load, or delivery schedule helped cause the crash.
A parts maker may be at fault if bad brakes, tires, steering parts, lights, underride guards, or other truck parts helped cause the crash.
Sometimes another driver causes the truck driver to lose control. When that happens, more than one driver or company may share fault.
Strong Law looks for every source of fault and every available insurance policy. That matters because truck crash injuries are often serious and expensive.
Truck accident evidence can disappear quickly. Some evidence may be held by the trucking company, driver, repair vendor, cargo company, or insurance carrier.
A Washington truck crash lawyer may send a preservation letter to demand that key evidence is saved.
Important truck accident evidence may include:
This evidence can help show why the crash happened, whether the driver followed safety rules, whether the trucking company cut corners, and how the crash harmed you.
Commercial trucking must follow state and federal safety rules. Federal truck safety rules are often handled by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, or FMCSA.
These rules can cover:
A safety rule violation can be strong evidence. For example, if driver logs show that a truck driver stayed on the road too long, that may support a fatigue claim. If maintenance records show missed brake inspections, that may support a mechanical failure claim.
Strong Law reviews these details to find out whether the truck driver, trucking company, or another party broke safety rules before the crash.
Truck crashes can happen in many ways. The type of crash can affect how the case is reviewed and what evidence matters most.
Strong Law handles Washington truck accident cases involving:
A jackknife crash happens when the trailer swings out at an angle from the cab. This can happen after sudden braking, slippery roads, speeding, or loss of control.
Large trucks have a high center of gravity. A truck may roll over when a driver takes a turn too fast, swerves suddenly, or carries an unsafe load.
An underride crash happens when a smaller vehicle slides under the side or rear of a trailer. These crashes can cause catastrophic injuries or death.
A loaded commercial truck needs more time to stop than a passenger car. Rear-end crashes may involve speeding, distraction, fatigue, bad brakes, or following too closely.
Large trucks need extra room to turn. A driver who fails to check blind spots or swings wide can hit cars, bicyclists, or pedestrians nearby.
Commercial trucks have large blind spots. A crash may happen when a truck driver changes lanes without seeing another vehicle.
Bad tires, poor maintenance, overloaded trailers, or road hazards can cause a tire blowout. A blowout may cause the driver to lose control.
Cargo that is not secured can fall from a truck or shift inside the trailer. This can cause rollovers, roadway hazards, or multi-vehicle crashes.
Delivery trucks, box trucks, and local commercial vehicles can cause serious injuries on city streets, in neighborhoods, at intersections, and in parking lots.
Most truck accidents happen because someone failed to follow basic safety rules. Some crashes involve driver error. Others involve company pressure, poor maintenance, or unsafe cargo practices.
Common causes include:
Truck drivers may be under pressure to meet deadlines. Fatigue can slow reaction time, reduce focus, and cause a driver to fall asleep behind the wheel.
A distracted truck driver may be using a phone, GPS, dispatch device, radio, food, or paperwork instead of watching the road.
Speeding makes large trucks harder to stop and easier to lose control. Speed can also make crash injuries worse.
A commercial truck needs more stopping distance than a passenger car. Tailgating can lead to devastating rear-end crashes.
Large blind spots make lane changes dangerous when a truck driver fails to check carefully.
Brake problems, tire failure, steering issues, broken lights, and worn equipment can all contribute to a crash.
Cargo that is too heavy or not secured correctly can shift, fall, or make the truck harder to control.
Alcohol, drugs, and some medications can impair a truck driver and put everyone nearby at risk.
A trucking company may be at fault if it hired an unsafe driver, skipped background checks, ignored prior violations, or failed to train the driver.
Strong Law helps truck accident victims across Washington, including Tacoma, Everett, Pierce County, Snohomish County, and surrounding communities.
Washington truck crashes often happen on I-5, SR 16, I-90, US 2, port routes, warehouse routes, delivery routes, and roads near freight hubs.
If your crash happened in Pierce County, our Tacoma truck accident lawyers can help with truck crashes involving I-5, SR 16, Port of Tacoma routes, downtown Tacoma, Lakewood, Puyallup, University Place, Spanaway, and nearby roads.
If your crash happened in or near Snohomish County, our Everett personal injury lawyers can help injured people in Everett and nearby communities.
Strong Law also handles broader injury claims through our Washington personal injury lawyer page.
Several Washington laws can affect a truck accident claim. Two key issues are the filing deadline and comparative fault.
Many Washington truck accident injury claims have a three-year filing deadline under RCW 4.16.080. In many cases, that time starts on the date of the crash.
If you miss the deadline, you may lose your right to recover money for your injuries.
Some cases have different rules. This can happen when the crash involves a child, a government agency, a death, or other special facts.
Washington uses comparative fault under RCW 4.22.005. You may still recover money even if you were partly at fault.
Your recovery can be reduced by your share of fault.
For example, if your damages were $500,000 and you were found 20% at fault, your recovery could be reduced by 20%. That would leave $400,000.
Insurance companies often use fault arguments to pay less. They may claim you were speeding, distracted, following too closely, driving in the truck’s blind spot, or failed to avoid the crash.
Strong Law uses evidence to push back against unfair blame.
Truck accident insurance claims can be harder than regular auto claims. A commercial truck crash may involve large insurance policies, several companies, and aggressive defense teams.
You may have to deal with:
Insurance companies may try to:
Do not sign a release or accept a quick settlement before you understand the full value of your claim.
"Just wanted to say thank you to Jed and his team at Strong Law. Not only was I happy with the outcome, but the entire process as a whole. I would definitely recommend this firm to anyone. Thanks again."
"I had a claim involving my own insurance company. I tried to negotiate with them, and they completely denied my claim – two times. I then hired Strong Law, and the change was instant. The insurance company immediately began negotiating, and Jed was able to secure an unbelievably good settlement. I will never again attempt to take-on an insurance company without Strong Law in my corner. Thank you!"
"I hired Strong Law after my car accident. Jed and his team worked hard on my case. They were professional and compassionate through my surgery and as I recovered, and they were awesome on communication. I got justice and awesome compensation. I would recommend Strong Law to anyone in my situation."
A Washington truck accident attorney can help you seek money for the full impact of the crash.
Truck crash injuries can lead to long-term medical care, missed work, permanent limits, and major life changes. The insurance company’s first offer may not include future care or the full personal impact of the injury.
Financial losses are costs that can usually be shown with bills, records, and other documents. They may include:
Personal losses are the ways the crash affects your body, mind, comfort, and daily life. They may include:
Washington does not have a standard cap on money damages in ordinary truck accident injury claims. The value should be based on the harm caused by the crash.
Washington generally does not allow punitive damages in standard personal injury claims unless a specific law allows them.
A commercial truck can weigh far more than a passenger vehicle. When a truck hits a smaller vehicle, the injuries can be life-changing.
Strong Law helps with truck accident injuries involving:
Some injuries do not show up right away. Always get medical care after a truck crash, even if you feel like you may be okay at first.
Truck crashes can be fatal. When a loved one dies because of a truck crash, the family may have legal options.
A wrongful death claim may include funeral costs, final medical bills, lost income, loss of support, and loss of companionship.
These cases require careful review. The right claim may involve the truck driver, trucking company, insurer, cargo company, maintenance company, or another responsible party.
Strong Law can help families understand their options after a fatal truck crash. You can also visit our Washington wrongful death lawyer page for more information.
Strong Law handles truck accident cases on a contingency fee basis. That means you do not pay upfront attorney fees.
We only get paid if we recover compensation for you.
Truck accident cases can require expert review, records, filings, and evidence work. During your free consultation, we explain the fee agreement clearly, including how attorney fees and case costs are handled.
There should be no surprises before you choose whether to hire us.
Choosing the right truck accident lawyer in Washington can affect your claim. Truck cases often require more evidence, more investigation, and more resources than a normal car accident case.
Helpful questions include:
The right lawyer should be able to explain the process clearly and tell you what steps need to happen next.
Strong Law focuses on accident and injury cases. Our team understands how insurers delay payment, dispute injuries, and use fault arguments to lower settlement offers.
Clients choose Strong Law because we offer:
Before starting Strong Law, attorney Jed Strong defended injury claims for GEICO. That experience helps our team understand how insurers review claims, dispute injuries, and decide when to settle.
We use that knowledge to build stronger claims for injured people.
A Washington truck accident lawyer helps injured people seek money after a crash involving a semi-truck, commercial vehicle, tractor-trailer, delivery truck, or 18-wheeler. A Washington truck accident lawyer can investigate the crash, save trucking evidence, find who is at fault, deal with insurance companies, calculate losses, and file a lawsuit if needed.
Truck accident cases often involve larger vehicles, serious injuries, commercial insurance, federal safety rules, trucking company records, and multiple liable parties. Evidence like driver logs, black box data, and maintenance records may need to be saved quickly.
The truck driver, trucking company, truck owner, trailer owner, cargo loader, repair shop, freight broker, parts maker, or another negligent driver may be liable depending on what caused the crash.
Important evidence may include driver logs, black box data, dash camera footage, inspection records, maintenance records, cargo records, dispatch records, GPS data, witness statements, crash reports, and medical records.
Many Washington truck accident injury claims have a three-year filing deadline under RCW 4.16.080. Some cases have different rules, so it is important to get legal advice early.
Yes. Washington uses comparative fault under RCW 4.22.005. You may still recover money if you were partly at fault, but your recovery can be reduced by your share of fault.
Use caution. The trucking company’s insurer may use your statement to reduce or deny your claim. If you were hurt, blamed, or pressured to settle, speak with a lawyer before giving a recorded statement.
You may be able to recover money for medical bills, future care, lost wages, reduced earning ability, vehicle damage, pain and suffering, emotional distress, disability, scarring, and other crash-related losses.
A fatal truck accident may lead to a Washington wrongful death claim. These cases can involve funeral costs, final medical bills, lost income, loss of support, and other damages allowed by law.
Strong Law handles truck accident cases on a contingency fee basis. That means there is no upfront attorney fee. We only get paid if we recover compensation for you. The consultation is free.
Yes. Strong Law handles Washington semi truck accident claims involving commercial trucks, tractor-trailers, 18-wheelers, delivery trucks, box trucks, and other large commercial vehicles.
Yes. Strong Law handles commercial truck accident claims across Washington, including cases involving trucking companies, commercial insurers, delivery companies, cargo loaders, repair shops, and other responsible parties.
Contact a lawyer as soon as possible if you were injured in a truck crash. Early help can save trucking records, protect evidence, deal with insurance companies, and help prevent mistakes that could hurt your claim.
If you were hurt in a truck accident in Washington, Strong Law can help you understand your rights, deadlines, and next steps.
Whether your crash happened in Tacoma, Everett, Pierce County, Snohomish County, or another Washington community, our team can handle the insurance company and protect your claim.
You do not have to accept a low settlement before you know what your case may be worth.
Call Strong Law today for a free consultation with a Washington truck accident lawyer.
No fee unless we win.
We review reports, photos, witness statements, medical records, insurance letters, and other evidence to understand what happened and who may be responsible.
We review medical bills, lost income, future care, pain and suffering, property damage when applicable, and other losses tied to the claim.
We handle communication with insurers and push back against low offers, delays, and attempts to shift blame.
If the insurance company refuses to make a fair offer, we can file a lawsuit and prepare the case for court.
Before founding Strong Law, attorney Jed worked as in-house counsel for GEICO, defending insurance companies in accident and injury claims. That experience helps our team understand how insurers evaluate claims, dispute injuries, and decide when to settle. We use that knowledge to build stronger claims for injured people.
You owe us nothing unless we recover compensation for you. There is no obligation to hire us after your consultation and no hidden attorney fees along the way.
Our team does more than process paperwork. We answer your questions, explain your options, track important deadlines, and help you understand each step of the injury claim.
We will review your injury claim at no cost and explain your options clearly. The goal is to help you protect your health, your claim, and your financial recovery after a serious accident or injury.
Our team is standing by to help you.