Recovering from a serious accident is overwhelming, and Georgia’s injury laws can be just as confusing as the medical bills piling up on the kitchen table. We built this resource library so that injured Georgians — and the families helping them — have straightforward answers about how claims work, what compensation is available, and where to turn for medical and government help. Whether you were rear-ended on GA-400, hurt on someone else’s property, or you’re searching for a Georgia personal injury lawyer, the guides below explain the law in plain English. To learn more about our firm, visit Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys or request a free consultation today.
Understanding Personal Injury Law in Georgia
Personal injury law in Georgia is governed by both statutes from the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (O.C.G.A.) and decades of case law from the Georgia Supreme Court and Court of Appeals. Knowing the basic framework — who bears the burden of proof, how fault is divided, what kinds of damages a jury can award, and how long you have to act — is the foundation of any successful claim. The eight resources below walk through the core legal concepts that shape every personal injury case filed in Georgia, from a minor fender-bender in Sandy Springs to a catastrophic truck collision on I-285.
- Understanding Negligence in Georgia
- Georgia’s Comparative Fault Law Explained
- Statute of Limitations for Personal Injury Cases in Georgia
- Understanding Liability in Georgia Accidents
- What Evidence Do You Need for a Personal Injury Claim
- Economic vs. Non-Economic Damages in Georgia
- How Pain and Suffering Is Calculated in Georgia
- How Contingency Fees Work
Two Georgia statutes anchor most personal injury claims in the state. The first is O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33, which gives most injury victims two years from the date of the incident to file a lawsuit. The second is O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33, Georgia’s modified comparative negligence rule, which bars recovery entirely if the injured person is found to be 50% or more at fault. Missing the filing deadline or letting an insurer assign you too much blame can end an otherwise strong case before it begins.
Common Injuries After an Accident
The injuries that bring people to our firm range from soft-tissue strains that resolve in weeks to permanent disabilities that change the course of a life. The severity of the injury drives the medical treatment, the long-term prognosis, the available damages, and the strategy for negotiating with the insurance company. Below are four of the most common categories of injury we see across our car accident, truck accident, and premises liability cases.
- Whiplash and Neck Injuries After a Car Accident
- Traumatic Brain Injuries
- Back and Spinal Cord Injuries
- Soft Tissue Injuries
The Personal Injury Claims Process
A personal injury claim is not a single event — it’s a process that unfolds over months and sometimes years, with critical decisions to make at each stage. From the moments immediately after a crash through the final settlement or verdict, the choices you make about medical care, insurance communication, and legal representation have a direct effect on the outcome. The four guides below cover the most important inflection points in a Georgia injury claim.
- When Should You Hire a Personal Injury Lawyer?
- What to Do Immediately After a Car Accident in Georgia
- Dealing With Insurance Companies After an Accident
- How Long Does a Personal Injury Case Take in Georgia?
Important Georgia Accident Resources
Georgia consistently ranks among the most dangerous states for drivers, with high-volume corridors like I-285, I-75, I-85, and GA-400 funneling millions of vehicles through metro Atlanta every day. The Georgia Department of Transportation and the Governor’s Office of Highway Safety publish data on fatal and serious-injury crashes statewide, and patterns emerge year after year showing where the greatest risks lie. The resources below pull that public data together so injured Georgians and their families understand the broader context of the roads they travel.
Georgia Government Resources
After an accident, you’ll likely need to interact with several government agencies — to obtain a crash report, replace a driver’s license, file an insurance complaint, or follow up on a criminal charge against an at-fault driver. The links below connect you directly to the official Georgia departments and offices that most often come up in personal injury matters.
- Georgia Department of Public Safety — Georgia State Patrol and Motor Carrier Compliance Division
- Georgia Department of Driver Services (DDS) — driver’s licenses, driving records, and license reinstatement
- Georgia Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner — auto insurance complaints and verification
- Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) — roadwork, traffic data, and crash statistics
- Georgia Governor’s Office of Highway Safety — annual fatality and DUI reports
- State Bar of Georgia — attorney licensing and consumer assistance
- Georgia Courts — court directories, forms, and filings
- Sandy Springs Police Department — crash reports for incidents in Sandy Springs
- Dunwoody Police Department — crash reports for incidents in Dunwoody
- DeKalb County Police Department — crash reports for unincorporated DeKalb
- Fulton County Sheriff’s Office — Fulton County incident records
Local Georgia Resources
Where you receive emergency medical care and where your lawsuit eventually gets filed are two of the most consequential decisions in the early stages of a personal injury claim. Georgia is home to several Level I trauma centers that handle the most serious injuries, as well as a network of state and federal courts where civil cases proceed. The two resources below walk through the medical and judicial infrastructure that injury victims need to know.
Talk to a Georgia Personal Injury Attorney Today
When the medical bills arrive and the insurance adjuster keeps calling, you don’t have to face it alone. At Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys, founding partner Jason Schneider has practiced injury law since graduating from Emory Law School in 1984 and holds an AV® preeminent rating from Martindale-Hubbell, recognition from the Million Dollar Advocates Forum®, and has been named a Distinguished Super Lawyer every year from 2017 through 2024. He is joined by partner Campbell Williamson, also an Emory Law graduate and a Georgia Super Lawyers Rising Star from 2020 through 2024, and attorney Evelyn Graham, who graduated cum laude from Georgia State University School of Law. Together, our trial team handles serious cases throughout metro Atlanta, including Sandy Springs car accidents, Dunwoody personal injury matters, Sandy Springs truck accidents, premises liability, and slip and fall claims. Call our office, message us through our website, or request a free consultation there’s no fee unless we recover for you.