Fort Worth Motorcycle Accident Lawyers
Standing on Business.
Do I need a motorcycle accident lawyer in Fort Worth?
If a driver hit you on your bike and you got hurt, the short answer is yes. Riders get blamed first and paid last, and the insurer is counting on it. A lawyer flips that.
The injuries off a bike run severe, the bias against riders is real, and the coverage is its own puzzle. We carry the claim across the roads you ride, I-35W, Loop 820, and I-30, and if it goes to court, we build it for a Tarrant County jury.
The danger is not easing; Texas still loses close to 600 riders a year (TxDOT).
What usually causes Fort Worth motorcycle wrecks?
Almost none of these start with the rider. They start with a driver who looked but did not see, and every one of them leaves a different trail of evidence.
The car that turned across you
A driver turning left across your lane is the single most common way riders get hit; they misjudge your speed, or they never register the bike at all.
Merged into, never seen
A driver drifts into your lane while checking a mirror instead of a shoulder, and a rider sitting in that blind spot has nowhere to go.
A door swung open
On a street lined with parked cars, a door opening into your path leaves you a fraction of a second to react, and often no room to use it.
Hit from behind at a light
Stopped at a Fort Worth light, a distracted driver behind you turns a routine red into a serious wreck, because a bike offers nothing to absorb the hit.
Gravel, potholes, and debris
What a car rolls right over can put a bike down. A neglected road, or a load that fell off a truck, can shift the fault to whoever left it there.
Failure to yield
A driver who runs the light or ignores the right of way at a Fort Worth intersection puts the rider in the most exposed spot on the road.
Will they blame me just because I ride?
They will try. There is an old assumption baked into how insurers and some jurors see this: the rider was reckless, the rider was speeding, the rider knew the risk going in. We do not let that assumption go unanswered. Your gear and your helmet get used against you too, so know this: Texas lets many riders 21 and older ride without a helmet as long as they carry insurance or finished a safety course (Tex. Transp. Code § 661.003). A helmet question does not end your claim.
I have watched adjusters decide a rider was at fault before they read a single page of the report. It is lazy, and it is wrong. The driver who turns left into a motorcycle broke the same rule they would have broken in front of a car. I make them prove their story, not yours.
Josh Alexander · Founder & Managing Attorney
What riders get told, and what Texas law actually says:
No helmet means no claim.
Not in Texas. Riders 21 and older can ride without one if they carry insurance or finished a safety course (§ 661.003), and going bare headed does not decide who caused the wreck.
A helmet question does not end your case.
The driver who turned across your lane still broke the rule. We keep the focus on what they did, not on the gear you had on.
If you were partly at fault, you get nothing.
That is not how it works here. You lose the claim only if your share of the blame climbs past 50% (§ 33.001).
At or under half, you still recover.
Your money gets reduced by your percentage, not erased, and we fight to keep that number low.
The insurer’s first offer is fair.
It is built to close your claim fast, usually before anyone knows what your injuries will actually cost.
Wait until the costs are clear.
We hold the line until the medical picture is in, then demand what the full injury is worth.
Where do Fort Worth riders get hit most?
The north-south spine
Constant construction and short merges on I-35W give drivers every chance to miss a bike sitting right beside them.
The 820 & North Tarrant Express
High speed lane changing on the 820 loop is the exact setup that drops a rider into a blind spot at the worst possible moment.
The east-west run
Heavy traffic toward downtown and Arlington shares I-30, and a bike has the least margin for error of anyone on it.
The nightlife corridors
West 7th, Sundance Square, and the Stockyards put distracted and impaired drivers on the same streets riders love, especially after dark.
The high-speed connectors
US-287 and the Airport Freeway (SH-121) move fast traffic across the county, right where a missed yield catches a rider out.
The south-side toll run
Open stretches and quick exits on the Chisholm Trail Parkway invite speed, and one skipped mirror check is all it takes.
We do not file your case off a generic map. We name the road, the lane, and the line of sight, because how a left turn looks from the saddle is nothing like how it looks from a car. Several of these overlap the most dangerous intersections in Texas.
Tarrant County motorcycle crash data is public through the TxDOT Crash Records Information System (CRIS) at cris.txdot.gov; we pull the numbers for your road.What if they say the wreck was partly my fault?
You probably still recover. Texas only shrinks your share of the money; it does not erase the claim, unless your share climbs past 50% (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 33.001).
That 50% line is the whole game for the other side. Push your fault to 51 and they owe nothing, so expect them to try. Slide the bar and you can see why it is worth fighting over.
At 20% at fault, your 20% share comes off the top; you keep $80,000 of the example.
Illustration only. More than 50% at fault bars recovery (§ 33.001). Real values depend on your facts.
On a bike the other side reaches for the same three words every single time: speed, recklessness, no helmet. None of those three decide fault in Texas. The driver who failed to yield is the one who caused the crash, and that is exactly where I keep the case pointed.
Josh Alexander · Founder & Managing Attorney
What can I recover after a Fort Worth motorcycle crash?
Bike injuries tend to run severe, so the numbers that matter most are usually the long term ones. Texas splits what you recover three ways.
Economic damages
The costs that come with a receipt.
- Medical care now and the surgeries ahead
- Lost income and lost earning power
- The bike, the gear, and out-of-pocket costs
Noneconomic damages
The losses no receipt ever covers.
- Pain and suffering
- Permanent scarring and impairment
- Mental anguish and a life you cannot live the same
Punitive damages
Reserved for the worst drivers.
- On the table for gross negligence
- Common where a drunk driver is involved
- Built to punish, not just repay
What it adds up to depends on the injuries, the fault split, and the coverage we can reach. Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
What should I do right after a Fort Worth motorcycle accident?
What you do in the first day can decide the claim. Keep it simple, and protect yourself and the case at the same time.
Not sure what to do next? Call (817) 330-2744Get treated, even if you can walk away
Road rash and a sore shoulder can hide a fracture or a brain injury. A record from day one, whether at JPS, Texas Health Harris Methodist, or anywhere else, ties the injury to the wreck, and our free Texas injury checker helps you catch what adrenaline is masking.
Get the driver and the witnesses
Grab their insurance and plate, plus the name of anyone who saw the driver turn or merge into you. Witnesses carry even more weight on a bike.
Pull the CR-3 report
Fort Worth PD or DPS writes it up, and that CR-3 report through TxDOT becomes the backbone of your version of events.
Do not give a recorded statement
The driver’s insurer will call fast and friendly. You do not owe them a statement, so wait until you have a lawyer in your corner.
Call before the trail goes cold
Texas gives you two years to file (§ 16.003), but skid marks, camera footage, and witness memory all fade in days. The sooner we start, the more we can save.
How will the insurance company treat my motorcycle claim?
Whatever name is on the policy, the moves are predictable, and the rider bias just hands them an extra angle to work. Knowing the playbook is half of beating it.
The friendly recorded call
It sounds like sympathy. It is really a hunt for words they can quote back later to cut your claim. Skip it.
The quick lowball
An early check lands before anyone knows the full injuries. Cash it, sign the release, and the case is over for good.
The rider angle
They lean on speed and the no helmet story to move fault onto you. We answer with the report, the data, and the witnesses.
Your own UM/UIM coverage
If the driver had little or no insurance, your own uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage can still pay. We find it and pursue it.
One rule: say nothing and sign nothing until you have talked to a lawyer.
I spent years on the other side, telling carriers how to value a claim and where to shave it. The rider quietly gets a discount in that math that has nothing to do with the law. I know the move, and now I take it apart for you.
Matthew Graham · Managing Litigation Attorney · Former insurance defense director
What results does J. Alexander Law get?
We are not going to invent a motorcycle number to fill a page. Here is what is real and verifiable today.
See all verdicts & settlements →Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. “Millions recovered” reflects firm wide recoveries across multiple matters, not a single or motorcycle accident specific case.
Who will handle my case, in English or Spanish?
A real attorney, not an intake bot. We are bilingual, reachable any hour, and paid only when you are.
Meet the team →
Riders call me after being treated like they had it coming. They did not. A crash comes down to who broke the rules of the road, and on a bike that is almost never the rider. You owe me nothing unless I win.
Josh Alexander · Founder & Managing Attorney · U.S. Marine Corps veteran
A Texas trial lawyer and Marine veteran who has recovered millions for injured Texans, riders included, across motor vehicle and catastrophic injury cases.
- Super Lawyers Rising Stars, 2022 to 2026
- Multi-Million Dollar Advocates, lifetime member
- U.S. Marine Corps veteran
- Texas Bar No. 24086984
He ran insurance defense across a 10 state region, so he knows exactly how carriers value and fight a motorcycle claim, because he used to run that side of it. Licensed and active in Tarrant County.
- Former insurance defense director, 10 state region
- 25+ years of civil trial experience
- Licensed in TX, OK, NM & CO
- Texas Bar No. 24027186
She handles motorcycle and motor vehicle crashes, catastrophic injury, and wrongful death, and works with Fort Worth clients in English and Spanish.
- Motorcycle & motor vehicle litigation
- J.D. with Honors, St. Mary’s Law
- Bilingual; English & Español
- Texas Bar No. 24096510
What do Fort Worth riders ask us most?
Direct answers for Texas and Tarrant County. A free review tells you how they land in your case.
What should I do right after a motorcycle accident in Fort Worth?
Can they use it against me if I was not wearing a helmet?
Can I still recover if I was partly at fault for the motorcycle crash?
How long do I have to file a motorcycle accident claim in Texas?
What does a Fort Worth motorcycle accident lawyer cost?
If you would rather start on your own first, our free Texas injury tools can decode a crash report, flag the symptoms worth watching, and map where these wrecks keep happening.
And if you need a different kind of help in Fort Worth, our wrongful death lawyers step in when a rider does not make it home. We also handle car accidents, pedestrian accidents, and truck accidents across Tarrant County, and this page is part of our statewide Texas motorcycle accident practice. You can also read real client reviews before you call.
Free case review. No fee unless we recover.
Fort Worth, TX 76164
You pay nothing unless we win. We advance the case costs and get paid out of the recovery.