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Car Accident Help in Tucson, Arizona

Just been in a crash in Tucson? Here's what matters right now: get safe, get documented, get medically checked — and know the Arizona rules that shape your claim before you talk to any insurance adjuster.

Arizona quick facts:
Free, vetted help is within reach for Tucson crash victims.

First steps after a crash in Tucson

  1. Call 911 if anyone is hurt or vehicles block traffic. A Tucson police report becomes the backbone of your claim.
  2. Document the scene — photos of all vehicles, the roadway, signals, and any visible injuries; collect witness contacts.
  3. Exchange information with every driver: insurance, license, plate.
  4. Get medically evaluated within 72 hours, even if you feel fine — Tucson has emergency rooms, urgent care clinics, and accident-injury specialists; what matters is being seen promptly and telling the provider it was a car accident. Why this matters →
  5. Report to your insurer with facts only — and read our claim guide before giving any recorded statement to the other driver's insurance company.

How Arizona's fault system affects your claim

Arizona is an at-fault state: the at-fault driver's insurer is responsible for your damages, which makes the fault determination — the police report, witness statements, and scene evidence — the most valuable part of your file. Protect that evidence from day one.

Finding qualified help in Tucson

Use our Find Help directory to locate a car accident attorney in Tucson: search "Tucson car accident lawyer" on two or more of the major directories (Avvo, Justia, Martindale-Hubbell), verify the Arizona bar record, and prefer attorneys active in the American Association for Justice or the Arizona trial lawyers association. Our 15-minute vetting checklist walks you through it.

Frequently asked questions — Tucson crashes

How long do I have to file a car accident lawsuit in Arizona?

Arizona's statute of limitations for most car accident injury claims is generally 2 years from the date of the crash, with exceptions that can shorten or extend it (claims against government entities are often much shorter). Confirm your exact deadline with a licensed Arizona attorney.

Is Arizona a no-fault state?

Arizona is an at-fault state: the driver who caused the crash (through their insurer) is responsible for the resulting damages, and fault determines whose policy pays.

Do I need a police report for a crash in Tucson?

Yes — call 911 from the scene whenever there are injuries or significant damage. If officers don't respond, file a report at your local Tucson police station or through the state's crash-report process as soon as possible; insurers will ask for it.

How do I find a good car accident lawyer in Tucson?

Cross-check candidates on at least two reputable directories (Avvo, Justia, Martindale-Hubbell), verify their Arizona bar record, and look for membership in the American Association for Justice or the Arizona trial lawyers association. Consultations are free and fees are contingency-based.

More Tucson accident guides

Start with the full guide: What To Do After a Car Accident covers every step in detail.