
Toledo Car Accident Lawyer — Keep More of Your Settlement
Trial-ready case prep for Lucas County crashes, at a 20% contingency fee instead of the 33% most Ohio firms charge. Free case review — no obligation, no pressure.
We know the roads, courts, and carriers in Lucas County.
Field notes · Lucas County
270,871
residents of Toledo, OH — every one a potential juror, witness, or defendant.
Toledo sits at the crossroads of the Ohio Turnpike and I-75's Michigan-bound truck route. Most Lucas County claims we see involve commercial traffic on the Turnpike, the DiSalle Bridge, or the I-75 / I-280 split near the Glass City skyway. The Lucas County Court of Common Pleas on Adams Street handles the bulk of serious injury litigation here, and we prepare Toledo cases with that courthouse's specific judicial preferences in mind.
High-incident corridors
01 — 03
- 01The I-75 / I-280 split near downtown
- 02I-80 (Ohio Turnpike) through Lucas County
- 03The DiSalle Bridge on I-75 over the Maumee
Major highways
Primary trial court
Lucas County Court of Common Pleas
Municipal court
Toledo Municipal Court
20% fee. Not 33% like everyone else.
Most Toledo personal injury firms charge a one-third contingency. On a $60,000 settlement, that's roughly $20,000 going to legal fees. Our 20% model — built around faster, tech-enabled case preparation — puts around $8,000 of that back in your pocket without cutting corners on case quality.
Industry standard
33%
What most Toledo plaintiff firms charge. Non-negotiable for most clients.
Injuro fee
20%
Same case quality, lower fee. You keep more of your recovery.
Cases we take in Toledo
Injury claims in Lucas County rarely fit one mold. Here's what we handle most often — and what we prepare every file for.
Motor vehicle accidents
Car, truck, motorcycle, and rideshare collisions — from rear-end injuries to multi-vehicle crashes on the interstate.
Premises liability
Slip-and-fall, negligent security, and unsafe property conditions in stores, parking lots, and apartment complexes.
Workplace injuries
Third-party claims that go beyond workers' compensation — defective equipment, negligent subcontractors, and unsafe job sites.
Dog bites & animal attacks
Ohio is a strict-liability state. If an owner's dog injured you, you don't need to prove the animal had a history of aggression.
The three rules that shape every Ohio claim.
Every Lucas County claim runs through the same Ohio Revised Code. Knowing these rules — and how local carriers argue around them — is half the job.
Statute of limitations
ORC § 2305.10
2 years from the date of the crash
An action for bodily injury must be brought within two years after the cause of action accrues.
Read the statute →Comparative negligence
ORC § 2315.33
50% fault bar
Ohio follows modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar. If you are 50% or less at fault, you can still recover damages, reduced by your share of fault. If you are more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing.
Read the statute →Dog bite liability
ORC § 955.28
Strict liability for owners
Ohio is a strict-liability state for dog bites. Victims do not need to prove the owner knew the dog was dangerous. The owner, keeper, or harborer is liable for injuries unless the victim was trespassing or provoking the dog.
Read the statute →How It Works
Your Case, Our Fight, Four Steps.
Tell Us What Happened
Share your story in a free, confidential case review. We'll assess your claim and outline your options — no pressure, no obligation.

We Build a Bulletproof Claim
Our legal team gathers records, documents damages, and assembles the evidence needed to demand full compensation.

We Negotiate Aggressively
Armed with thorough preparation and deep claims data, we push back hard on lowball offers until the number is right.

You Get Paid — and Keep More
When we settle, our lower fee structure means a bigger check in your hands. That's the whole point.

What People Are Saying
Toledo questions, straight answers
Everything below applies specifically to cases we handle in Toledo and across Lucas County. Still have questions? The free review answers them.
Ohio gives you 2 years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury lawsuit (ORC § 2305.10). That deadline applies whether your crash happened on I-75 or on a surface street inside Lucas County. Missing it almost always means losing your right to recover — so don't wait.

Find Out What Your Case Is Worth — Free.
Get a detailed case assessment from our legal team at no cost. No commitment, no fine print. Just a clear-eyed look at your claim and what you stand to recover.
Talk to a real person, not a chatbot
Get connected with our intake team right away.
Available when you need — because injuries don't wait
We're here whenever you need help.
The incident
How were you hurt?
Pick the option that best describes what happened. You can add detail later.
Before you file
Two tools most Toledo plaintiffs use before they sign anything.
Settlement calculator
Estimate your Toledo case in 30 seconds
Medical × multiplier + wages, adjusted for Ohio comparative fault. See 20% vs 33% fee math side-by-side.
Run the calculator →
Ohio guide · 8 min read
Ohio Statute of Limitations for Car Accidents: The 2-Year Rule Explained
In Ohio, you have 2 years to file a car accident lawsuit under ORC § 2305.10. Learn when the clock starts, what pauses it, and what happens if you miss it.
Read guide →