Property owners are required by law to keep their premises safe. When they cut corners and you got hurt, they owe you. But their insurer is already working to minimize your payout — or blame you entirely.
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Property owners have large insurance policies. These are the results victims get when they stop accepting the first offer.
Store claimed victim "should have seen" the hazard. Attorney obtained surveillance footage before it was deleted, showing no wet floor sign was placed. 5.5× the initial offer.
Restaurant blamed the victim's footwear. Attorney documented maintenance failures and the hip fracture's long-term impact on the client's ability to work. 4.5× the original offer.
Landlord claimed they "didn't know" about the broken railing. Attorney found maintenance requests going back 6 months proving they had been notified. Nearly 5.5× the first offer.
Results may vary. Past case outcomes do not guarantee future results. Individual results depend on specific facts, injuries, and circumstances.
Premises liability cases require proving the property owner knew about the hazard and failed to fix it. An experienced attorney will review your fall at no cost — and if you have a case, they'll fight for every dollar, including medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering.
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A specialist is looking at your slip and fall case right now. You'll receive a call from a local number shortly — this is the most important call you'll take today.
Keep your phone nearby and answer the call.
Missing this call may delay your case review.
Answer the callA specialist will call from a local number within 60 seconds. Pick up — they're ready to help.
Review your case togetherThey'll walk through where the fall happened, your injuries, and what the property owner's liability looks like.
No fees unless you winIf you move forward, you pay nothing out of pocket — ever.
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Premises liability insurers specialize in minimizing payouts. They'll investigate the scene, collect statements, and build their defense while you're still recovering.
Most commercial properties overwrite security camera footage on a 30-day cycle. An attorney can immediately send a legal preservation notice to prevent the property owner from destroying the most critical evidence of your fall.
Property owners and their insurers routinely argue you weren't paying attention, wearing appropriate footwear, or that the hazard was "open and obvious." An experienced attorney counters these tactics from day one.
If your fall happened on a public sidewalk, government building, or transit system, you may have as little as 30–90 days to file a notice of claim. This deadline is much shorter than the standard statute of limitations — and there are no exceptions.
Answer 3 quick questions about your fall. Takes less than 60 seconds. No legal jargon, no paperwork.
A specialist reviews your case and calls you within minutes. Be ready — the faster you respond, the stronger your position before evidence disappears.
If your case qualifies, you're connected with an experienced premises liability attorney who fights for maximum compensation — zero fees unless you win.
It depends on injury severity, medical costs, and lost income. Minor injuries may settle for $10,000–$50,000. Serious injuries like hip fractures, TBI, or spinal damage can result in six- to seven-figure settlements, especially against commercial properties with large insurance policies.
Probably. Property owners and their insurers routinely try to shift blame to the victim. In most states, even if you were partially at fault, you can still recover compensation. An attorney will investigate the facts and build your case.
Yes. While filing an incident report strengthens your case, it's not required. Your attorney can use medical records, witness statements, photos, and other evidence to build your claim even without a formal report.
You may have a claim against the city or municipality responsible for maintaining the sidewalk. These cases have shorter filing deadlines (often 30–90 days for a notice of claim), so it's critical to act fast.
Photos of the hazard and location, your injuries, the shoes you were wearing, any incident report, witness contact info, and medical records. Keep the clothes and shoes from the day of the fall — they may be evidence.
Most premises liability cases settle in 6–18 months. Cases against government entities may take longer due to procedural requirements. Your attorney will pursue the fastest path to fair compensation.
Property owners have insurance for exactly this situation. An experienced premises liability attorney will fight for the full compensation you're owed — medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering. Free consultation, no fees unless you win.
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