Were you injured in a Warminster car accident? Call Flager Law for a free case evaluation: (215) 953-5200.
A Warminster car accident lawyer at Flager Law can help you recover after a serious crash on Street Road, York Road, County Line Road, or anywhere in Warminster Township. We have served injured drivers across Bucks and Montgomery Counties since 1990. Our team knows the local roads, the local police, and the insurance adjusters who handle Warminster claims. The consultation is free and there is no fee unless we win.
Warminster Township sits in Bucks County right against the Montgomery County border. Crashes can be filed at the Bucks County Justice Center in Doylestown or, depending on the exact location, at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown. We file in both. We know each courthouse, each set of judges, and the regional defense bar.
In addition, we serve every part of Warminster and the surrounding area. We meet clients near home when that helps. From the Street Road corridor down to the County Line Road border, we handle cases throughout the township and the adjacent communities of Hatboro, Willow Grove, and Ivyland.
Call 911 from the scene. Warminster Township Police are the primary local department. Get the report number and request a copy when it becomes available. Photograph the scene if you can do so safely.
Get medical care next. Holy Redeemer in Meadowbrook, Abington Hospital on Old York Road, and Doylestown Hospital all handle injury patients from Warminster crashes. Adrenaline masks injuries. Even if you feel fine at the scene, get checked. Many of our clients walk away from a crash and wake up the next morning unable to function.
Warminster crashes range from low-speed parking lot fender benders along Street Road to higher-speed collisions on Route 611 just to the west or on the PA Turnpike to the south. Each can produce serious injuries. We handle traumatic brain injuries, herniated and bulging discs, whiplash, broken bones, ligament tears, and wrongful death cases.
We document every injury and every cost. For serious cases, we work with life care planners and vocational economists to project future medical expenses and lost earning capacity. The number we present to the insurance company reflects the full impact, not just today’s bills.
We start by investigating the crash. We pull the police report, request 911 audio, look for traffic camera or business surveillance footage, and locate witnesses. The Street Road corridor has heavy commercial activity and plenty of cameras, but the footage often gets overwritten within 30 days. We move fast to preserve it.
Then we coordinate with your medical providers, document every cost, and present a demand to the insurance company. If they refuse to settle fairly, we file suit in the appropriate county court.
Pennsylvania drivers choose between full tort and limited tort coverage. Limited tort generally bars recovery for pain and suffering unless your injury meets the serious injury threshold under state law. That threshold includes death, serious impairment of body function, or permanent serious disfigurement.
Several exceptions can restore full rights to limited tort policyholders. Crashes caused by drunk drivers, out-of-state drivers, and commercial vehicles often fall outside the restriction. We review your policy and the crash facts at no cost.
Pennsylvania law allows injury victims to recover several categories of damages. The first is medical expenses, including emergency treatment, surgery, hospital stays, follow-up care, physical therapy, prescriptions, and assistive devices. Even a moderate car accident can produce treatment costs that stretch over many months once physical therapy, imaging, and specialist visits are added up.
Next, you can recover lost wages and lost earning capacity. If the car accident kept you out of work, that lost income is recoverable. If your injuries limit your future ability to earn, vocational economists can project that lost capacity over your remaining work life. We work with those experts on serious cases.
Finally, Pennsylvania allows recovery for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and in qualifying cases, loss of consortium for a spouse. These non-economic damages are real and substantial. We document them carefully so the insurance company cannot dismiss them.
In serious-injury cases, future damages often outweigh the immediate medical bills. Long-term physical therapy, future surgeries, home modifications, in-home care, and reduced earning capacity all need to be calculated and proven. We work with treating physicians and life care planners to project those future costs accurately. The insurer must pay for what your injury will cost over its full duration, not just what has been billed so far.
Insurance companies are businesses. Their goal is to close claims for as little money as possible. After a car accident, expect a quick call from an adjuster offering to settle for a small amount before you even know the full extent of your injuries. That first offer is almost always a fraction of fair value. Do not accept it without legal advice.
Adjusters also use recorded statements and social media surveillance to build a defense. They may ask seemingly friendly questions that are actually designed to lock you into a story that hurts your case later. They also scan public posts looking for photos or videos that contradict your reported injuries. We handle every communication with the insurer so these tactics cannot derail your claim.
In addition, insurers sometimes delay processing in hopes that injured victims will give up and accept less. We do not let delay become a weapon. We push the claim forward on a steady schedule, and we file suit when an insurer refuses to engage in good faith.
Holy Redeemer in Meadowbrook, Abington Hospital on Old York Road, and Doylestown Hospital all serve Warminster residents. Serious trauma may be transferred to Penn Trauma or Jefferson in Philadelphia.
Warminster Township is in Bucks County, so most cases are filed at the Bucks County Justice Center in Doylestown. Crashes that occurred over the line in Montgomery County may be filed at the Montgomery County Courthouse.
Yes. We handle crashes on every major Warminster corridor, including Street Road (Route 132), York Road (Route 263), County Line Road, Bristol Road, and the intersections that connect them.
Pennsylvania’s general statute of limitations for personal injury is two years. Claims against the township, the county, or PennDOT may have shorter notice deadlines. Call us as soon as possible.
Nothing up front. We handle every injury case on a contingency basis, which means our fee comes only out of the recovery we win for you. If we do not recover anything, you do not owe a fee. The initial consultation is also always free.
Timelines vary widely. A clear-liability case with moderate injuries may settle in a few months once medical treatment is complete. A disputed case or one involving serious injuries may take a year or longer, especially if it has to go through litigation. We push for the fastest fair result, never the fastest result.
Warminster drivers deserve a firm that knows the township. Call Flager Law at (215) 953-5200 for a free case evaluation. No fee unless we win.
