Illinois Pedestrian Accident Lawyer
Illinois — and Chicago in particular — has high pedestrian traffic at intersections, transit stops, and crosswalks. Pedestrians struck by vehicles have no protection and frequently suffer fractures, head trauma, and internal injuries. Failure to yield, distracted driving, and turning vehicles are leading causes.
Why an Illinois Pedestrian Accident Claim Is Different
Illinois — and Chicago in particular — has high pedestrian traffic at intersections, transit stops, and crosswalks. Pedestrians struck by vehicles have no protection and frequently suffer fractures, head trauma, and internal injuries. Failure to yield, distracted driving, and turning vehicles are leading causes.
Insurance companies treat Illinois injury claims as a numbers game. They know the state's deadlines, its comparative-fault rules, and exactly how to frame a lowball offer as "generous." An attorney who handles pedestrian accident cases every day knows those same rules — and uses them for you instead of against you. From the moment you have representation, the adjuster has to stop calling you and start dealing with someone who knows what your claim is actually worth.
Illinois Laws That Affect Your Pedestrian Accident Case
Illinois law requires drivers to yield to pedestrians in crosswalks (625 ILCS 5/11-1002). When a pedestrian is hit, the driver's liability insurance is the first source of recovery; the pedestrian's own auto policy may also provide medical and UM/UIM benefits even though they were on foot. Comparative negligence may be raised if the pedestrian crossed against a signal, but it rarely eliminates a claim. The two-year deadline applies.
The two-year clock is unforgiving. Under 735 ILCS 5/13-202, most Illinois injury suits must be filed within two years. Miss it and the court can throw out even a strong case. Claims involving a city, county, transit agency, or other government body can carry a one-year deadline and short notice requirements — another reason to act early.
Compensation You May Be Owed
Illinois law allows injury victims to recover both economic and non-economic damages. Because the Illinois Supreme Court struck down caps on compensatory damages in Lebron v. Gottlieb Memorial Hospital (2010), there is no statutory ceiling on what a jury can award for pain, suffering, or loss of normal life in a pedestrian accident claim. A complete recovery may include:
- Medical expenses. Emergency treatment, hospital stays, surgery, medication, physical therapy, assistive devices, and the cost of future care your injury will require.
- Lost income. Wages missed during recovery, plus diminished earning capacity if your injury prevents you from returning to the same work.
- Pain and suffering. Compensation for the physical pain, discomfort, and reduced quality of life caused by the injury — uncapped in Illinois.
- Emotional distress. Anxiety, depression, PTSD, sleep loss, and the psychological toll that often follows a serious accident.
- Property damage. Repair or replacement of your vehicle or other personal property damaged in the incident.
- Loss of normal life. An Illinois-specific category recognizing the activities, hobbies, and daily pleasures you can no longer enjoy.
What to Do After a Pedestrian Accident in Illinois
- Get medical care immediately. Your health comes first, and prompt treatment creates the records that connect your injuries to the incident.
- Report the incident. File a police report, crash report, incident report, or notify the property owner so there is an official record.
- Document everything. Photograph the scene, your injuries, and any hazards. Collect names and contact details for every witness.
- Do not give a recorded statement to the insurer. Adjusters use early statements to minimize payouts. Speak with an attorney first.
- Watch the 2-year clock. Illinois' statute of limitations (735 ILCS 5/13-202) generally gives you two years — far less for claims against a government body.
- Talk to an Illinois personal injury lawyer. A free review costs nothing and protects evidence before it disappears.
Frequently Asked Questions
Illinois generally gives you two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit (735 ILCS 5/13-202). If a government entity is involved, you may have only one year and could be required to give notice far sooner, so it is wise to speak with an attorney quickly.
Illinois follows modified comparative negligence with a 51% bar (735 ILCS 5/2-1116). You can still recover as long as you were not more than 50% responsible, but your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. An attorney can fight an inflated fault assignment from the insurer.
Nothing up front. Personal injury attorneys in Illinois work on a contingency fee — you pay nothing unless they recover money for you, and the consultation is always free.
Value depends on the severity of your injuries, your medical bills and lost income, the long-term impact on your life, and the available insurance coverage. Because Illinois does not cap compensatory damages, serious-injury cases can be substantial. A free case review gives you a realistic range.
You can, but insurers have teams whose job is to pay you as little as possible. Studies and experience consistently show that represented claimants recover more — even after fees — than those who negotiate alone, particularly in serious-injury cases.
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