How to Find a Personal Injury Lawyer (and What to Ask Before Hiring)
If you’ve been hurt in an accident, the lawyer you choose will shape the next year or two of your life. This guide walks through how to find a personal injury attorney who fits your case, your geography, and your budget — and the specific questions to ask before you sign anything.
When you actually need a personal injury lawyer
Not every injury claim needs a lawyer. If you slipped on a wet floor at a grocery store, scraped a knee, and the store offered to pay your urgent-care bill that afternoon, you can probably handle it yourself. The threshold for hiring a lawyer rises sharply when:
- You missed work or expect to miss work because of the injury
- Your medical bills are above a few thousand dollars
- The other party’s insurer is being slow, evasive, or hostile
- The injury may be permanent or recurring
- There’s any disagreement about who was at fault
The rule of thumb personal injury lawyers themselves use: if your damages (medical + lost wages + pain and suffering) plausibly add up to more than $10,000, the lawyer’s contingency fee is almost always worth it.
How personal injury lawyers get paid
Almost all personal injury work in the U.S. is done on contingency — the lawyer takes a percentage of what you recover, and nothing if you lose. Standard contingency rates:
- 33% if the case settles before a lawsuit is filed
- 40% if the case settles after a lawsuit is filed (or goes to trial)
You should also expect to be responsible for case expenses (filing fees, deposition costs, expert witness fees) which are deducted from your share, not the lawyer’s. A good firm will advance these and only collect if you win.
What to look for in a personal injury attorney
Practice focus. A general practitioner who handles divorces, real estate closings, and the occasional car accident is not who you want. Look for a firm whose website and bio make clear that personal injury is the majority of their work.
Trial experience. Most personal injury cases settle, but the cases that get the highest settlements are the ones where the insurance company believes the lawyer would actually take it to a jury. Ask: how many cases have you tried to verdict in the last three years?
Board certification (if applicable). Some states certify attorneys in Personal Injury Trial Law via the state bar’s specialization program (Texas, Florida, California, and a handful of others). This is a meaningful credential and not common — fewer than 5% of personal injury lawyers in qualifying states hold it.
Local court familiarity. If your accident happened in Houston, you want a lawyer who knows Harris County judges, the local jury pool, and the defense firms representing the major insurers in that region.
Ten questions to ask in the free consultation
Most personal injury firms offer a free initial consultation. Use the time well. Bring this list:
- How many cases like mine have you handled in the last three years?
- What’s your contingency rate — and does it change if we have to file a lawsuit?
- Will you personally be working on my case, or will it be handed to an associate?
- Who pays the case expenses up front, and what happens to those if we lose?
- What’s your rough estimate of my case value, and how did you arrive at it?
- How long do you expect this to take?
- Have you tried a case like mine to verdict? What was the outcome?
- Are there any settlement offers you’d recommend rejecting on principle?
- How will I get updates on my case, and how often?
- If I’m unhappy and want to fire you, what happens to the work you’ve done?
A good lawyer will answer all of these without flinching. A lawyer who dodges question 9 (communication) is going to ghost you for six months — that’s the single most common complaint clients have about their PI lawyer.
Red flags
- Anyone who guarantees a specific dollar outcome (“we’ll get you $50,000”) — they don’t know that yet
- Any lawyer who pressures you to sign at the consultation
- Firms that primarily advertise on TV and route you to whichever associate has capacity
- Anyone who calls you out of the blue after an accident — that’s almost certainly illegal solicitation in your state
Next step
If you’re ready to start contacting lawyers, browse personal injury attorneys by city to find ones licensed in your jurisdiction. Most will offer a free 30-minute consultation by phone or video.
This article is general information and not legal advice. Every case is different. Consult a licensed attorney in your state about your specific situation.
This article is general information and not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction about your specific situation.