Car Accident Lawyers in Maryland
Find the best accident attorneys in Maryland (MD). Browse by city or view top-rated lawyers below.
Browse by City
Annapolis
44 lawyers
Aspen Hill
39 lawyers
Frederick
32 lawyers
Baltimore
31 lawyers
Bethesda
30 lawyers
Baltimore County
29 lawyers
Calvert County
28 lawyers
Columbia
27 lawyers
Anne Arundel County
27 lawyers
Bowie
24 lawyers
Charles County
21 lawyers
District Heights
20 lawyers
Carroll County
17 lawyers
Bel Air
15 lawyers
Dundalk
11 lawyers
Fort Washington
9 lawyers
Catonsville
9 lawyers
Ellicott City
8 lawyers
Allegany County
6 lawyers
Cecil County
6 lawyers
Top Rated Lawyers in Maryland

Adam Daniel Greivell, Attorney at Law

Habibi Law Group

Smallow Injury Lawyers

Pishevar & Associates

Alan J. Belsky, Attorney at Law
Accident and Injury Lawyers in Maryland
Maryland has some of the strictest injury laws in the country. If you've been hurt in a car crash, workplace accident, or any other incident caused by someone else's negligence, the legal rules here can work against you fast. Finding the right lawyer in Maryland matters more than in most states because of how the fault system works.
Maryland Injury Laws
The statute of limitations for most personal injury and wrongful death claims in Maryland is three years from the date of the injury or death. Miss that deadline and the court will almost certainly throw out your case.
Maryland follows pure contributory negligence, making it one of only four states in the country with this rule. If you are found even 1% at fault for the accident, you recover nothing. Zero. A trucking company could be 99% responsible for a crash, but if the jury decides you share any blame at all, your claim is barred.
Maryland caps non-economic damages in personal injury cases. For claims arising in 2024, the cap is $920,000, and it increases by $15,000 each year. Economic damages like medical bills and lost wages have no cap.
When to Contact a Lawyer in Maryland
- You were injured in a car or truck accident and the other driver's insurer is claiming you were partly at fault.
- You suffered a workplace injury and your workers' compensation claim has been denied or delayed.
- A family member died due to someone else's negligence and you need to file a wrongful death claim within the three-year deadline.
- You were hurt in a slip and fall on someone else's property and the property owner is disputing liability.
Frequently Asked Questions About Maryland Injury Claims
How does contributory negligence affect my Maryland accident case?
Maryland's pure contributory negligence rule means the other side only needs to prove you were slightly at fault to destroy your entire claim. Even crossing outside a crosswalk or following too closely can be used against you. Defense attorneys and insurance adjusters in Maryland use this rule aggressively, which is why building a strong liability case from the start matters so much here.
Can I still file a claim if I was hurt at work in Maryland?
Yes. Maryland's Workers' Compensation Commission handles most workplace injury claims regardless of who was at fault. You generally have one year from the date of injury — or two years from the date you knew the injury was work-related — to file. In some cases, you may also have a separate third-party claim against someone other than your employer, such as an equipment manufacturer.
