Personal Injury Lawyer Bucks County — Feasterville, PA

Personal Injury Lawyer Bucks County

You didn’t expect this to happen. Nobody does.

Whether you were hurt in a collision on Street Road, a slip and fall at a Warminster shopping center, a workplace accident at one of Bucks County’s industrial parks, or a crash on the Pennsylvania Turnpike near Trevose, you’re now dealing with something you weren’t prepared for. Pain that won’t settle. Bills that keep arriving. An insurance company that sounds helpful but is working against you from the moment the phone rings.

At J. Fine Law Firm, our Bucks County personal injury attorneys have spent over 25 years fighting for accident victims across Pennsylvania. We’ve recovered over $50 million for clients from Levittown to Doylestown, from Warminster to New Hope. We know these roads, these courts, and exactly what your case is worth.

Call (888) 913-3899 for a free consultation. We come to you, your home, your hospital room, or the scene.

Do You Have a Personal Injury Case in Bucks County?

“How do I know if what happened to me is worth pursuing?”, this is the question we hear most often from Bucks County accident victims.

Here is the honest answer: if another person or entity’s negligence caused your accident and you suffered any injury as a result, physical, financial, or emotional, you likely have a case worth exploring. You don’t need a catastrophic injury. 

You don’t need to have been completely blameless. Under Pennsylvania’s modified comparative negligence rule, you can recover compensation as long as you are found to be less than 51% responsible for what happened.

Quick Self-Assessment

Question If Yes — You Likely Have a Claim
Was someone else at fault, even partially? Yes
Did you seek medical attention after the incident? Yes
Are you experiencing pain, stiffness, or symptoms? Yes
Did you miss work or expect to miss work? Yes
Did you suffer property damage? Yes
Did the responsible party have insurance? Yes
Were there witnesses or cameras nearby? Strengthens your claim further

If you checked two or more of those boxes, a free consultation with a Bucks County personal injury lawyer is the right next step — not a guess.

Personal Injury Cases We Handle in Bucks County

J. Fine Law Firm represents victims across the full range of personal injury cases throughout Bucks County and the surrounding region.

Car Accidents

Street Road, Route 611, County Line Road, and the Route 1 corridor are among the most accident-prone roads in Bucks County. Whether it was a rear-end collision, a failure to yield, or a multi-vehicle crash near the Pennsylvania Turnpike interchange at Trevose, our Bucks County car accident attorneys know how to build a compelling claim, and how to fight back when insurers try to shift blame onto you.

Truck Accidents

The Route 1 corridor and I-276 carry heavy commercial truck traffic through Bucks County every day. When a tractor-trailer, delivery vehicle, or commercial carrier is involved, multiple insurance policies and multiple liable parties come into play, the driver, the trucking company, the cargo loader, and sometimes the vehicle manufacturer. We use black box data, ELD logs, and federal FMCSA records to hold every responsible party accountable.

Motorcycle Accidents

Bucks County’s scenic roads, River Road along the Delaware, Route 202 through New Hope, and the back roads of Doylestown and Buckingham, attract motorcyclists year-round. When an accident happens, riders face a built-in disadvantage: insurance companies assume the motorcyclist was at fault. Our attorneys fight that bias with evidence, witness testimony, and aggressive legal representation.

Bus Accidents

SEPTA regional rail and bus routes serve Bucks County commuters daily. Claims against SEPTA require filing a formal written notice within six months of the accident, far shorter than the standard two-year personal injury deadline. If your accident involved a public transit vehicle, contact us immediately. Missing that window forfeits your right to compensation entirely.

Bicycle Accidents

Bucks County’s trail network, towpath along the Delaware Canal, and suburban roads see a growing number of cyclists sharing space with vehicles. When a negligent driver, a defective road surface, or a property owner’s failure caused your bicycle accident, we hold them accountable.

Rideshare Accidents

Uber and Lyft accidents in Bucks County involve a tiered insurance system that depends on the driver’s app status at the moment of impact. Identifying which policy applies requires an attorney who knows how to use digital forensics and app data to lock in the right coverage. We handle rideshare claims routinely.

Slip and Fall / Premises Liability

Wet floors at Warminster shopping centers, icy sidewalks in Langhorne, poorly lit parking lots in Bristol, property owners across Bucks County have a legal duty to keep their premises safe. When they fail, victims have the right to hold them accountable. We investigate the history of the hazard, pull maintenance records, and build cases that make negligent property owners pay.

Workplace Accidents / Workers’ Compensation

Bucks County’s construction industry, manufacturing facilities, warehouses, and healthcare sector generate significant workplace injury claims every year. If you were hurt on the job, you may be entitled to workers’ compensation benefits, and if a third party contributed to your injury, a separate personal injury lawsuit on top of that.

Wrongful Death

If a loved one was killed due to someone else’s negligence, in a car accident, a workplace incident, a slip and fall, or a medical error, Pennsylvania law allows surviving family members to pursue a wrongful death claim. There is a two-year statute of limitations from the date of death. Do not wait.

Pennsylvania Personal Injury Law: What Bucks County Victims Need to Know

Modified Comparative Negligence — The 51% Rule

Pennsylvania follows a modified comparative negligence standard. If you are found to be less than 51% responsible for the accident, you can recover compensation, reduced by your percentage of fault. If your share of fault reaches 51% or more, you recover nothing. Insurance companies will aggressively try to push your fault above that threshold to minimize or eliminate your claim.

The 2-Year Statute of Limitations

Most personal injury claims in Pennsylvania must be filed within two years of the date of the accident. Injuries on government-owned property, such as a municipal sidewalk, county road, or public building, may have shorter deadlines and additional notice requirements. Do not assume you have time. Evidence disappears, witnesses move on, and deadlines are absolute.

No Cap on Compensatory Damages

Pennsylvania places no cap on compensatory damages in personal injury cases. What you are owed is determined by what the evidence supports, not by what the insurance company’s first offer says.

What Your Bucks County Personal Injury Case Is Worth

Most accident victims dramatically underestimate the value of their claim in the days immediately after an incident. The full picture includes far more than your immediate medical bills.

Full Claim Value — Bucks County Personal Injury

Damage Category What It Covers
Emergency medical care ER, ambulance, imaging, immediate surgery
Ongoing medical treatment Physical therapy, specialist consultations, follow-up care
Future medical costs Long-term rehabilitation, pain management, adaptive equipment
Lost wages Income lost while recovering and unable to work
Lost earning capacity If injuries affect your ability to work long-term
Property damage Repair or full replacement value of your vehicle or property
Pain and suffering The daily physical and emotional toll of your injuries
Loss of enjoyment of life Activities, relationships, and experiences your injuries have taken
Family impact Consortium claims if your injuries have affected your household

J. Fine Law Firm has secured a $500,000 settlement in a motor vehicle accident, a $400,000 federal jury verdict against a carrier that opened with zero dollars, and a $280,000 settlement for a slip and fall on ice in Montgomery County, neighboring Bucks County. These results were not accidents. They were the product of a team that prepares every case as if it is going to trial from day one.

The Evidence That Protects Your Claim — And Why It Disappears Fast

Evidence Type How Long Before It’s Gone
Surveillance footage from businesses on Street Road or Route 611 30–72 hours before automatic overwrite
Traffic camera footage Varies — days to weeks
Witness memory Degrades significantly within 48–72 hours
Vehicle black box (EDR) data Can be overwritten in 30 days; destroyed in salvage
Police dash cam and body cam footage Varies by department — request promptly
Maintenance records for premises liability cases Must be formally demanded before routine destruction

When J. Fine Law Firm is retained, a spoliation letter goes out within 24 hours — legally requiring all parties to preserve every piece of this evidence. That obligation changes what the other side can do with it.

What to Do After an Accident in Bucks County

  • Call 911 — ensure police respond and a report is filed
  • Seek medical attention the same day — delayed injuries are common and undocumented gaps hurt your case
  • Photograph everything — vehicles, road conditions, the hazard, your injuries
  • Get witness contact information — independent accounts are invaluable
  • Do not speak to the other party’s insurance before calling us
  • Do not post about the accident on social media — anything you say publicly can be used against you
  • Call (888) 913-3899 — we respond within 24 hours and come to you

High-Risk Areas for Personal Injury Accidents in Bucks County

If your accident happened at any of these locations, we know the roads, the courts, and the legal landscape:

  • Street Road (Route 132) — the primary commercial corridor connecting Feasterville to Warminster, with heavy truck traffic and frequent intersection accidents
  • Route 611 (Easton Road) — a designated truck route running through Warminster, Doylestown, and beyond
  • County Line Road — the Bucks-Montgomery county border creates jurisdictional complexity when accidents happen nearby
  • Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-276) near Trevose — high-speed commercial traffic and merging hazards
  • Route 1 corridor — one of the busiest commercial strips in the county connecting Langhorne to Bensalem
  • Bristol Pike (Route 13) — high-volume road through Levittown and Bensalem with frequent commercial vehicle traffic
  • Route 202 (Doylestown area) — suburban commercial strip with turning movement accidents and pedestrian exposure

The Team Fighting for Bucks County Personal Injury Victims

Jason Fine Law Group

Why Local Representation Matters

J. Fine Law Firm’s Feasterville-Trevose office sits at the edge of Bucks County, minutes from Warminster, Horsham, and the Route 611 corridor. This is not a Center City firm that treats Bucks County as a satellite market. This is a team that litigates in the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in Doylestown, knows the local defense firms on the other side of the table, and understands the specific roads and intersections where Bucks County accidents happen.

Your Legal Team

Attorney Role Why It Matters
Jason Fine Founding Member & Senior Trial Attorney 25+ years trial experience; 10-time consecutive PA Super Lawyers nominee (top 5% in PA); “Litigator of the Year”; direct client access guaranteed
Joe LaRosa Senior Trial Attorney Active litigator across Bucks, Montgomery, Philadelphia, Delaware, Chester, and Berks counties
Ciro Tufano Of Counsel / Senior Trial Attorney NJ Super Lawyer; leads NJ litigation and NJ Work Injury Team

Joe LaRosa’s active litigation across Bucks County means your case is handled by an attorney who knows Doylestown courts, Bucks County juries, and the local insurance defense landscape — not someone applying general personal injury principles from a distance.

Frequently Asked Questions — Personal Injury Lawyer Bucks County

How long do I have to file a personal injury claim in Bucks County? 

Generally two years from the date of the accident under Pennsylvania law. Injuries on government-owned property may have shorter deadlines. Acting quickly also preserves critical evidence, surveillance footage, witness memories, and vehicle data all disappear fast. Contact us immediately after your accident.

What if I was partially at fault for the accident? 

You can still recover compensation in Pennsylvania as long as your share of fault is less than 51%. Your award is reduced by your percentage of blame. Insurance companies aggressively try to push your fault above 51%, having an attorney document the other party’s negligence is essential to protecting your recovery.

Does J. Fine Law Firm handle cases in Bucks County specifically? 

Yes. Our Feasterville-Trevose office at 275 E. Street Road serves all of Bucks County. Joe LaRosa actively litigates in Bucks County courts. We know the Bucks County Court of Common Pleas in Doylestown and the local legal landscape throughout the county.

Will I have to pay anything upfront? 

No. J. Fine Law Firm works on a 100% contingency basis, you pay nothing unless we win. No upfront costs, no hourly fees, no financial risk of any kind.

Can you come to me if I’m hospitalized or can’t travel? 

Yes. We come to your hospital room, your home, or wherever you are. The consultation is free and the evidence preservation process starts the same day you call.

What if my claim was already denied by the insurance company? 

Do not accept a denial as the final word. Insurance companies deny valid claims routinely, knowing many victims won’t fight back. J. Fine Law Firm is trial-ready and has gone to federal court to win a $400,000 verdict against a carrier that offered zero dollars. A denial is not the end of your case.

If you were injured in an accident anywhere in Bucks County — Warminster, Horsham, Doylestown, Langhorne, Levittown, New Hope, Bristol, or anywhere along the Street Road, Route 611, or Route 1 corridors call J. Fine Law Firm at (888) 913-3899.

The consultation is free. The representation costs nothing unless we win. And the team fighting for you knows Bucks County courts, Pennsylvania law, and exactly what your case is worth.

No Win, No Fee. Ever.

Jason Fine Law Firm, P.C. serves personal injury victims across Bucks County, Montgomery County, Philadelphia, and South Jersey from offices in Feasterville-Trevose PA, Philadelphia PA, and Cherry Hill NJ. Se habla español.

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