One moment you’re driving home from work. The next, your car is wrecked, your neck hurts, and your phone is ringing. It’s the other driver’s insurance company, and they sound helpful. They’re not. Insurance adjusters are trained to minimize what they pay you, and every word you say in that first phone call can be used to reduce your claim. Before you talk to anyone, talk to a lawyer who actually represents you. Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Hablamos Espanol.

The Insurance Company Is Not Your Friend

This is the single most important thing to understand after a car accident: the insurance company, even your own, is not on your side. Their job is to pay you as little as possible. Here is how they do it.

Recorded statements used against you. Within days of your accident, an adjuster will call and ask for a “recorded statement.” They’ll frame it as routine. It’s not. They’re looking for anything they can twist. “I’m feeling okay” becomes their evidence that you weren’t really hurt. “I didn’t see them coming” becomes their argument that you were partly at fault. You are not legally required to give a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurance company, and you should not.

These are not struggling companies. The U.S. property and casualty insurance industry posted approximately $169 billion in profits in 2024 — its 23rd consecutive profitable year. Progressive reported $8.5 billion in net income. GEICO posted $7.8 billion in underwriting profit. They have the money. They just do not want to pay it to you.

Lowball first offers. The first settlement offer almost always comes before you’ve finished medical treatment, before you know whether you’ll need surgery, and before anyone has calculated your future medical costs. That’s by design. They want you to accept a number that looks decent today but won’t cover what you’ll need six months from now.

Delay tactics. Insurance companies know that injured people have bills to pay. The longer they delay, the more financial pressure builds, and the more likely you are to accept less than your case is worth.

Pressure to settle early. Adjusters will tell you that hiring a lawyer will “slow things down” or “eat into your recovery.” The data says the opposite. Studies consistently show that accident victims who hire attorneys recover significantly more, even after attorney fees.

After an accident, you are alone against a system designed to pay you as little as possible. You do not have to be.

Common Causes of Car Accidents in Dallas

Dallas has been ranked the most dangerous driving city in the nation, according to a 2021 Outdoorsy composite crash-risk analysis. Dallas is one of the most dangerous cities in Texas for drivers. In 2024, 331 people died in traffic crashes in Dallas County — one death every 26 hours. Dallas’s fatal crash rate of 14.42 per 100,000 residents is more than double Austin’s rate of 6.84. Just 7% of Dallas streets account for 57% of all severe-injury and fatal crashes. The combination of heavy traffic, highway construction, and aggressive driving creates conditions for serious collisions every day. The most common causes we see include:

  • Distracted driving. Texting, phone calls, GPS, eating behind the wheel. Distracted driving is the leading cause of accidents in Dallas and across Texas. Distracted driving killed 380 people in Texas in 2024.
  • Speeding. Higher speeds mean longer stopping distances and more violent impacts. Speed-related crashes on I-30, I-35E, and I-635 are especially devastating because of the volume of commercial traffic on those corridors.
  • Drunk and impaired driving (DWI). Texas leads the nation in alcohol-related traffic fatalities. DWI accidents often result in catastrophic injuries because impaired drivers fail to brake or take evasive action.
  • Running red lights and stop signs. Intersection collisions in Dallas are among the most dangerous because of the T-bone impact angle, which offers almost no structural protection to occupants.
  • Failure to yield. Merging onto highways, making left turns, and changing lanes without checking blind spots cause thousands of accidents in Dallas every year.
  • Road rage. Aggressive driving, tailgating, and deliberate intimidation are increasingly common on Dallas highways.
  • Weather conditions. Rain, ice, and fog on I-30 through downtown, I-35E through the Mixmaster, and I-635 through the LBJ corridor create hazardous conditions that drivers are expected to account for. Driving too fast for weather conditions is negligence.

If another driver’s carelessness caused your accident, Texas law entitles you to compensation.

Injuries We See in Car Accident Cases

There is no such thing as a “minor” car accident when it comes to your body. We regularly see clients who walked away from a wreck feeling fine, only to develop serious symptoms days or weeks later. The most common injuries in car accident cases include:

  • Whiplash and cervical strain. The sudden back-and-forth motion of a collision can damage muscles, ligaments, and discs in the neck. Whiplash is the most common car accident injury, and it is often far more serious than people realize.
  • Herniated and bulging discs. The force of a collision can push disc material into the spinal canal, pressing against nerves or even the spinal cord itself. Disc injuries can cause radiating pain, numbness, weakness, and may require epidural injections or surgery.
  • Concussions and traumatic brain injuries (TBI). You do not have to hit your head to suffer a concussion. The rapid deceleration of a crash can cause the brain to strike the inside of the skull. Symptoms like headaches, memory problems, difficulty concentrating, and mood changes can persist for months or longer.
  • Fractures. Broken bones in the wrists, arms, ribs, pelvis, and legs are common in moderate-to-severe collisions.
  • Soft tissue injuries. Sprains, strains, and tears to muscles and ligaments throughout the body. These injuries don’t show up on X-rays, which is why insurance companies love to minimize them.
  • PTSD and anxiety. Car accidents are traumatic events. Many of our clients experience flashbacks, driving anxiety, sleep disturbances, and emotional distress long after the physical injuries heal. These are real, compensable damages under Texas law.

The critical point: even if you feel “fine” after an accident, get evaluated by a doctor. Some of the most serious injuries, including disc herniations and mild TBIs, have delayed onset. If you wait too long to seek treatment, the insurance company will argue that the accident didn’t cause your injuries.

What Your Car Accident Case Is Worth

Every case is different, but Texas law allows you to recover compensation in several categories:

  • Medical bills (past and future). Every dollar spent on emergency care, imaging, surgery, physical therapy, pain management, and any future treatment you’ll need because of the accident.
  • Lost wages. If your injuries kept you from working, you’re entitled to recover the income you lost during your recovery.
  • Loss of earning capacity. If your injuries permanently affect your ability to work or earn what you earned before the accident, you can recover the difference.
  • Pain and suffering. Texas law recognizes that injuries cause more than just financial losses. Physical pain, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and the impact on your relationships all have value.
  • Property damage. Repair or replacement of your vehicle and any personal property damaged in the accident.

A note on medical bills in Texas: Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 41.0105, you can only recover medical expenses that have been “paid or incurred.” This means the amount actually paid or owed, not the full amount originally billed. This rule makes it critically important to document your medical expenses carefully and work with an attorney who understands how to present medical damages accurately under Texas law.

What to Do After a Car Accident in Dallas

The steps you take in the hours and days after a car accident directly affect the strength of your case. Here is what to do:

  1. Move to safety. If you can safely move your vehicle out of traffic, do so. Turn on your hazard lights. Check on passengers and other drivers.
  2. Call 911 and get a police report. Always call the police, even for “minor” accidents. A police report documents the scene, identifies witnesses, and often includes the officer’s assessment of fault. Without it, the insurance company can dispute what happened.
  3. Take photos and video. Photograph the damage to all vehicles, the accident scene, traffic signals, road conditions, skid marks, your injuries, and any visible debris. Take video if you can. Do this before vehicles are moved if it’s safe to do so.
  4. Get medical attention. Go to the emergency room or an urgent care facility the same day. If you wait days or weeks to see a doctor, the insurance company will argue your injuries weren’t caused by the accident. Prompt medical documentation is one of the strongest pieces of evidence in your case.
  5. Do not give a recorded statement. The other driver’s insurance company will call quickly. Be polite, give them your name and insurance information, and tell them your attorney will be in touch. You are not required to give a recorded statement, and doing so almost always hurts your case.
  6. Call a car accident lawyer. The sooner an attorney is involved, the better. We can preserve evidence, send spoliation letters to prevent dashcam or surveillance footage from being destroyed, communicate with insurance companies on your behalf, and make sure you don’t make mistakes that cost you money.

Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000. The consultation is free, and we don’t charge a fee unless we recover money for you.

Texas Car Accident Laws You Should Know

Statute of limitations: 2 years. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003, you have two years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit. If you miss this deadline, your case is barred forever. Two years sounds like a long time. It is not. Medical treatment takes months, records take weeks to obtain, and litigation preparation takes time. Do not wait.

Modified comparative fault: 51% bar. Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule under Section 33.001. If you were partially at fault for the accident, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. But if you are found to be 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. Insurance companies know this rule, and they will try to shift as much blame to you as possible. This is another reason recorded statements are dangerous.

Texas minimum insurance requirements. Texas law (Transportation Code Section 601.072) requires drivers to carry minimum liability insurance of $30,000 per person, $60,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $25,000 for property damage. “Full coverage” is not a real insurance term — it does not appear in any insurance contract or the Texas Insurance Code. These minimums are dangerously low. A single ER visit and follow-up treatment can exceed $30,000 easily. One in six Dallas drivers — roughly 16% — carries no insurance at all. If the at-fault driver carries only minimum coverage, your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) policy may be your best path to full recovery. UM/UIM coverage costs approximately $11 per month — roughly $136 per year — and it can be the difference between a full recovery and financial devastation.

PIP and MedPay. Personal Injury Protection (PIP) is optional in Texas, but insurance companies are required by law to offer it. If you have PIP or MedPay on your own auto policy, it can cover your medical bills and lost wages regardless of who was at fault. Check your policy or call us and we’ll review it with you.

Results We’ve Achieved

$1,067,874.84 — 18-Wheeler Accident / Wrongful Death. A commercial 18-wheeler rear-ended our client’s vehicle, causing catastrophic injuries requiring emergency lumbar surgery. The collision also took the life of her son. We recovered every dollar of available insurance coverage for the family.

$200,000 — T-Bone Collision (Dallas). Our client was struck in a T-bone crash by a negligent driver. We obtained $200,000 to cover treatment, pain, and loss of income.

$100,000 — Wrongful Death / Auto Accident. We achieved a wrongful death settlement within 45 days of the firm’s launch. Police initially blamed the victim, but our investigation discovered the driver had been drinking. We challenged the official narrative and established liability.

In SL Nabors v. Allen (Tex. App.–Dallas, 2026), a Dallas County jury awarded $1,078,743.73 to a driver who suffered herniated discs and a torn labrum after being hit by a commercial vehicle. The Fifth District Court of Appeals upheld every dollar.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is different.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to hire a car accident lawyer?

Nothing upfront. Guardia Law works on a contingency fee basis, which means we only get paid if we recover money for you. If we don’t win, you don’t owe us a fee. The consultation is free.

How long does a car accident case take to resolve?

It depends on the severity of your injuries and whether the insurance company negotiates fairly. Some cases settle in a few months. Others, especially those involving serious injuries or disputed liability, may require filing a lawsuit and can take a year or longer. We never rush a case to settlement before our client has finished treatment and we know the full picture.

Should I accept the insurance company’s first offer?

Almost never. The first offer is designed to close your claim cheaply, usually before you know the full extent of your injuries. Once you accept a settlement and sign a release, you cannot go back and ask for more money, even if your condition worsens. Let an attorney review any offer before you respond.

What if the other driver doesn’t have insurance?

You may still have options. If you carry uninsured motorist (UM) coverage on your own auto policy, you can file a claim with your own insurance company. Texas law requires insurers to offer UM/UIM coverage, so many drivers have it without realizing it. We can review your policy and advise you on the best path forward.

Do I need a lawyer if the accident was minor?

If you have any injuries at all, yes. “Minor” accidents frequently cause disc herniations, concussions, and soft tissue injuries that require months of treatment. Without a lawyer, you’re negotiating against a trained adjuster whose job is to minimize your payout. With a lawyer, you have someone working to make sure your medical bills, lost wages, and pain are fully compensated.

Serving Car Accident Victims Across the Dallas-Fort Worth Area

Guardia Law represents car accident victims in Dallas, Mesquite, Garland, Irving, Grand Prairie, Arlington, Fort Worth, Plano, McKinney, and communities throughout North Texas.

Attorney Rolando Quesada (Texas Bar No. 24083694) has spent his career holding insurance companies and corporations accountable on behalf of injured people, and has recovered millions for injured clients across Dallas. He brings a litigation background that includes hundreds of briefs, Daubert challenges, and mass tort cases. That experience means insurance companies know that when Guardia Law sends a demand, a lawsuit is right behind it if they don’t pay fair value.

Hablamos Espanol. Si usted o un ser querido fue lesionado en un accidente de auto, llame al (214) 380-4000 para una consulta gratuita y confidencial.

Call Guardia Law Today

You didn’t ask to be in this situation. But the decisions you make right now will determine whether you get the compensation you deserve or whether the insurance company walks away paying a fraction of what they owe.

Call (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Available 24/7. Hablamos Espanol.

Guardia Law, PLLC
Rolando Quesada, Managing Attorney
6301 Gaston Ave, Ste. 1516
Dallas, TX 75214
(214) 380-4000

Contingency fee. No fee unless we win.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

Car Accident Lawyer in Dallas, Texas

One moment you’re driving home from work. The next, your car is wrecked, your neck hurts, and your phone is ringing. It’s the other driver’s insurance company, and they sound helpful. They’re not. Insurance adjusters are trained to minimize what they pay you, and every word you say in that first phone call can be used to reduce your claim. Before you talk to anyone, talk to a lawyer who actually represents you. Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Hablamos Espanol.

The Insurance Company Is Not Your Friend

This is the single most important thing to understand after a car accident: the insurance company, even your own, is not on your side. Their job is to pay you as little as possible. Here is how they do it.

Recorded statements used against you. Within days of your accident, an adjuster will call and ask for a “recorded statement.” They’ll frame it as routine. It’s not. They’re looking for anything they can twist. “I’m feeling okay” becomes their evidence that you weren’t really hurt. “I didn’t see them coming” becomes their argument that you were partly at fault. You are not legally required to give a recorded statement to the other driver’s insurance company, and you should not.

These are not struggling companies. The U.S. property and casualty insurance industry posted approximately $169 billion in profits in 2024 — its 23rd consecutive profitable year. Progressive reported $8.5 billion in net income. GEICO posted $7.8 billion in underwriting profit. They have the money. They just do not want to pay it to you.

Lowball first offers. The first settlement offer almost always comes before you’ve finished medical treatment, before you know whether you’ll need surgery, and before anyone has calculated your future medical costs. That’s by design. They want you to accept a number that looks decent today but won’t cover what you’ll need six months from now.

Delay tactics. Insurance companies know that injured people have bills to pay. The longer they delay, the more financial pressure builds, and the more likely you are to accept less than your case is worth.

Pressure to settle early. Adjusters will tell you that hiring a lawyer will “slow things down” or “eat into your recovery.” The data says the opposite. Studies consistently show that accident victims who hire attorneys recover significantly more, even after attorney fees.

After an accident, you are alone against a system designed to pay you as little as possible. You do not have to be.

Common Causes of Car Accidents in Dallas

Dallas has been ranked the most dangerous driving city in the nation, according to a 2021 Outdoorsy composite crash-risk analysis. Dallas is one of the most dangerous cities in Texas for drivers. In 2024, 331 people died in traffic crashes in Dallas County — one death every 26 hours. Dallas’s fatal crash rate of 14.42 per 100,000 residents is more than double Austin’s rate of 6.84. Just 7% of Dallas streets account for 57% of all severe-injury and fatal crashes. The combination of heavy traffic, highway construction, and aggressive driving creates conditions for serious collisions every day. The most common causes we see include:

  • Distracted driving. Texting, phone calls, GPS, eating behind the wheel. Distracted driving is the leading cause of accidents in Dallas and across Texas. Distracted driving killed 380 people in Texas in 2024.
  • Speeding. Higher speeds mean longer stopping distances and more violent impacts. Speed-related crashes on I-30, I-35E, and I-635 are especially devastating because of the volume of commercial traffic on those corridors.
  • Drunk and impaired driving (DWI). Texas leads the nation in alcohol-related traffic fatalities. DWI accidents often result in catastrophic injuries because impaired drivers fail to brake or take evasive action.
  • Running red lights and stop signs. Intersection collisions in Dallas are among the most dangerous because of the T-bone impact angle, which offers almost no structural protection to occupants.
  • Failure to yield. Merging onto highways, making left turns, and changing lanes without checking blind spots cause thousands of accidents in Dallas every year.
  • Road rage. Aggressive driving, tailgating, and deliberate intimidation are increasingly common on Dallas highways.
  • Weather conditions. Rain, ice, and fog on I-30 through downtown, I-35E through the Mixmaster, and I-635 through the LBJ corridor create hazardous conditions that drivers are expected to account for. Driving too fast for weather conditions is negligence.

If another driver’s carelessness caused your accident, Texas law entitles you to compensation.

Injuries We See in Car Accident Cases

There is no such thing as a “minor” car accident when it comes to your body. We regularly see clients who walked away from a wreck feeling fine, only to develop serious symptoms days or weeks later. The most common injuries in car accident cases include:

  • Whiplash and cervical strain. The sudden back-and-forth motion of a collision can damage muscles, ligaments, and discs in the neck. Whiplash is the most common car accident injury, and it is often far more serious than people realize.
  • Herniated and bulging discs. The force of a collision can push disc material into the spinal canal, pressing against nerves or even the spinal cord itself. Disc injuries can cause radiating pain, numbness, weakness, and may require epidural injections or surgery.
  • Concussions and traumatic brain injuries (TBI). You do not have to hit your head to suffer a concussion. The rapid deceleration of a crash can cause the brain to strike the inside of the skull. Symptoms like headaches, memory problems, difficulty concentrating, and mood changes can persist for months or longer.
  • Fractures. Broken bones in the wrists, arms, ribs, pelvis, and legs are common in moderate-to-severe collisions.
  • Soft tissue injuries. Sprains, strains, and tears to muscles and ligaments throughout the body. These injuries don’t show up on X-rays, which is why insurance companies love to minimize them.
  • PTSD and anxiety. Car accidents are traumatic events. Many of our clients experience flashbacks, driving anxiety, sleep disturbances, and emotional distress long after the physical injuries heal. These are real, compensable damages under Texas law.

The critical point: even if you feel “fine” after an accident, get evaluated by a doctor. Some of the most serious injuries, including disc herniations and mild TBIs, have delayed onset. If you wait too long to seek treatment, the insurance company will argue that the accident didn’t cause your injuries.

What Your Car Accident Case Is Worth

Every case is different, but Texas law allows you to recover compensation in several categories:

  • Medical bills (past and future). Every dollar spent on emergency care, imaging, surgery, physical therapy, pain management, and any future treatment you’ll need because of the accident.
  • Lost wages. If your injuries kept you from working, you’re entitled to recover the income you lost during your recovery.
  • Loss of earning capacity. If your injuries permanently affect your ability to work or earn what you earned before the accident, you can recover the difference.
  • Pain and suffering. Texas law recognizes that injuries cause more than just financial losses. Physical pain, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and the impact on your relationships all have value.
  • Property damage. Repair or replacement of your vehicle and any personal property damaged in the accident.

A note on medical bills in Texas: Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 41.0105, you can only recover medical expenses that have been “paid or incurred.” This means the amount actually paid or owed, not the full amount originally billed. This rule makes it critically important to document your medical expenses carefully and work with an attorney who understands how to present medical damages accurately under Texas law.

What to Do After a Car Accident in Dallas

The steps you take in the hours and days after a car accident directly affect the strength of your case. Here is what to do:

  1. Move to safety. If you can safely move your vehicle out of traffic, do so. Turn on your hazard lights. Check on passengers and other drivers.
  2. Call 911 and get a police report. Always call the police, even for “minor” accidents. A police report documents the scene, identifies witnesses, and often includes the officer’s assessment of fault. Without it, the insurance company can dispute what happened.
  3. Take photos and video. Photograph the damage to all vehicles, the accident scene, traffic signals, road conditions, skid marks, your injuries, and any visible debris. Take video if you can. Do this before vehicles are moved if it’s safe to do so.
  4. Get medical attention. Go to the emergency room or an urgent care facility the same day. If you wait days or weeks to see a doctor, the insurance company will argue your injuries weren’t caused by the accident. Prompt medical documentation is one of the strongest pieces of evidence in your case.
  5. Do not give a recorded statement. The other driver’s insurance company will call quickly. Be polite, give them your name and insurance information, and tell them your attorney will be in touch. You are not required to give a recorded statement, and doing so almost always hurts your case.
  6. Call a car accident lawyer. The sooner an attorney is involved, the better. We can preserve evidence, send spoliation letters to prevent dashcam or surveillance footage from being destroyed, communicate with insurance companies on your behalf, and make sure you don’t make mistakes that cost you money.

Call Guardia Law at (214) 380-4000. The consultation is free, and we don’t charge a fee unless we recover money for you.

Texas Car Accident Laws You Should Know

Statute of limitations: 2 years. Under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003, you have two years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit. If you miss this deadline, your case is barred forever. Two years sounds like a long time. It is not. Medical treatment takes months, records take weeks to obtain, and litigation preparation takes time. Do not wait.

Modified comparative fault: 51% bar. Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule under Section 33.001. If you were partially at fault for the accident, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. But if you are found to be 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. Insurance companies know this rule, and they will try to shift as much blame to you as possible. This is another reason recorded statements are dangerous.

Texas minimum insurance requirements. Texas law (Transportation Code Section 601.072) requires drivers to carry minimum liability insurance of $30,000 per person, $60,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $25,000 for property damage. “Full coverage” is not a real insurance term — it does not appear in any insurance contract or the Texas Insurance Code. These minimums are dangerously low. A single ER visit and follow-up treatment can exceed $30,000 easily. One in six Dallas drivers — roughly 16% — carries no insurance at all. If the at-fault driver carries only minimum coverage, your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) policy may be your best path to full recovery. UM/UIM coverage costs approximately $11 per month — roughly $136 per year — and it can be the difference between a full recovery and financial devastation.

PIP and MedPay. Personal Injury Protection (PIP) is optional in Texas, but insurance companies are required by law to offer it. If you have PIP or MedPay on your own auto policy, it can cover your medical bills and lost wages regardless of who was at fault. Check your policy or call us and we’ll review it with you.

Results We’ve Achieved

$1,067,874.84 — 18-Wheeler Accident / Wrongful Death. A commercial 18-wheeler rear-ended our client’s vehicle, causing catastrophic injuries requiring emergency lumbar surgery. The collision also took the life of her son. We recovered every dollar of available insurance coverage for the family.

$200,000 — T-Bone Collision (Dallas). Our client was struck in a T-bone crash by a negligent driver. We obtained $200,000 to cover treatment, pain, and loss of income.

$100,000 — Wrongful Death / Auto Accident. We achieved a wrongful death settlement within 45 days of the firm’s launch. Police initially blamed the victim, but our investigation discovered the driver had been drinking. We challenged the official narrative and established liability.

In SL Nabors v. Allen (Tex. App.–Dallas, 2026), a Dallas County jury awarded $1,078,743.73 to a driver who suffered herniated discs and a torn labrum after being hit by a commercial vehicle. The Fifth District Court of Appeals upheld every dollar.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Every case is different.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to hire a car accident lawyer?

Nothing upfront. Guardia Law works on a contingency fee basis, which means we only get paid if we recover money for you. If we don’t win, you don’t owe us a fee. The consultation is free.

How long does a car accident case take to resolve?

It depends on the severity of your injuries and whether the insurance company negotiates fairly. Some cases settle in a few months. Others, especially those involving serious injuries or disputed liability, may require filing a lawsuit and can take a year or longer. We never rush a case to settlement before our client has finished treatment and we know the full picture.

Should I accept the insurance company’s first offer?

Almost never. The first offer is designed to close your claim cheaply, usually before you know the full extent of your injuries. Once you accept a settlement and sign a release, you cannot go back and ask for more money, even if your condition worsens. Let an attorney review any offer before you respond.

What if the other driver doesn’t have insurance?

You may still have options. If you carry uninsured motorist (UM) coverage on your own auto policy, you can file a claim with your own insurance company. Texas law requires insurers to offer UM/UIM coverage, so many drivers have it without realizing it. We can review your policy and advise you on the best path forward.

Do I need a lawyer if the accident was minor?

If you have any injuries at all, yes. “Minor” accidents frequently cause disc herniations, concussions, and soft tissue injuries that require months of treatment. Without a lawyer, you’re negotiating against a trained adjuster whose job is to minimize your payout. With a lawyer, you have someone working to make sure your medical bills, lost wages, and pain are fully compensated.

Serving Car Accident Victims Across the Dallas-Fort Worth Area

Guardia Law represents car accident victims in Dallas, Mesquite, Garland, Irving, Grand Prairie, Arlington, Fort Worth, Plano, McKinney, and communities throughout North Texas.

Attorney Rolando Quesada (Texas Bar No. 24083694) has spent his career holding insurance companies and corporations accountable on behalf of injured people, and has recovered millions for injured clients across Dallas. He brings a litigation background that includes hundreds of briefs, Daubert challenges, and mass tort cases. That experience means insurance companies know that when Guardia Law sends a demand, a lawsuit is right behind it if they don’t pay fair value.

Hablamos Espanol. Si usted o un ser querido fue lesionado en un accidente de auto, llame al (214) 380-4000 para una consulta gratuita y confidencial.

Call Guardia Law Today

You didn’t ask to be in this situation. But the decisions you make right now will determine whether you get the compensation you deserve or whether the insurance company walks away paying a fraction of what they owe.

Call (214) 380-4000 for a free consultation. Available 24/7. Hablamos Espanol.

Guardia Law, PLLC
Rolando Quesada, Managing Attorney
6301 Gaston Ave, Ste. 1516
Dallas, TX 75214
(214) 380-4000

Contingency fee. No fee unless we win.

Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.