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Car Accident Help in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

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

Pennsylvania quick facts:
Free, vetted help is within reach for Pittsburgh crash victims.

First steps after a crash in Pittsburgh

  1. Call 911 if anyone is hurt or vehicles block traffic. A Pittsburgh 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 — Pittsburgh 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 Pennsylvania's no-fault system affects your claim

Pennsylvania is a choice no-fault state. After most crashes, your own policy's Personal Injury Protection (PIP) pays your initial medical bills and lost wages no matter who caused the crash. To pursue the at-fault driver for pain and suffering, your injuries generally must meet Pennsylvania's legal threshold — one of the key questions a local attorney answers for free.

Finding qualified help in Pittsburgh

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

Frequently asked questions — Pittsburgh crashes

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

Pennsylvania'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 Pennsylvania attorney.

Is Pennsylvania a no-fault state?

Pennsylvania uses a choice no-fault system: your own Personal Injury Protection coverage pays initial medical bills and lost wages regardless of fault, and you can generally only step outside that system to sue when injuries meet the state threshold.

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

Yes — call 911 from the scene whenever there are injuries or significant damage. If officers don't respond, file a report at your local Pittsburgh 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 Pittsburgh?

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

More Pittsburgh accident guides

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