St. Louis Car Accident Lawyer

Trusted car accident lawyers with over 10 years of experience.

If you’ve been hurt in a car wreck in St. Louis, you may be facing a damaged vehicle, an emergency room bill, and an adjuster pushing for a recorded statement before your follow-up appointments are complete. Recovery takes time, but the financial side of an accident does not pause while you heal.

Schmittgens Injury Law Firm represents people hurt in motor vehicle crashes across the St. Louis area. Our founder Rob Schmittgens has handled auto injury claims for ten years. Talk to a St. Louis, MO car accident lawyer drivers can rely on. Schedule a free consultation today.

Car Accident Lawyer St. Louis, MO

What does a St. Louis car accident lawyer do for an injured driver?

A car accident attorney works on the civil side of the law. We handle the claim against the at-fault driver and that driver’s insurance carrier, along with any uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage you carry on your own policy. The work involves pulling the police report, preserving the vehicle and any electronic data inside it, requesting medical records and bills, and presenting a documented demand to the carrier. When the offer falls short of what the case is worth, we file suit in the appropriate Missouri court.

Insurance carriers tend to evaluate claims more carefully when an attorney represents the injured driver, in part because litigation becomes a real possibility.

Types of Car Accident Cases We Handle in St. Louis

We handle the full range of motor vehicle injury claims across the St. Louis metro. The mechanics of any given crash affect liability, but the underlying work follows a consistent pattern: establishing fault, documenting injuries, and pursuing the value of the claim through the insurance carrier or, when necessary, in court. The case types below represent the matters we encounter most often.

  • Rear-end collisions. The driver who struck you from behind generally carries presumptive fault under Missouri traffic law. Carriers still contest the value of the injuries, particularly when the impact appeared minor on the surface.
  • Intersection and T-bone crashes. These cases often turn on red-light evidence, traffic camera footage, and witness statements. We work to preserve such evidence early, before camera systems overwrite footage or witness memories fade.
  • Head-on collisions. The injuries in these wrecks tend to be severe, and the at-fault driver is often impaired, distracted, or attempting to evade another vehicle. We document the full medical picture and identify any additional liable parties.
  • Multi-vehicle pileups. Liability is typically divided across multiple drivers, and each carrier attempts to shift blame onto the others. We reconstruct the chain of impact, identify every responsible party, and pursue all available insurance coverage.
  • Rollover crashes. Vehicle defect, roadway design, or driver conduct can each contribute to a rollover. We work with reconstruction professionals when the cause is contested or when product liability claims may apply.
  • Hit and run accidents. When the at-fault driver flees the scene, your own uninsured motorist policy generally becomes the primary recovery source. We have handled UM claims with most major carriers writing policies in Missouri.
  • DUI accidents. Drunk driving cases often support punitive damages in addition to compensatory recovery. The related criminal proceedings can also produce evidence useful in the civil case.
  • Rideshare accidents. Uber and Lyft crashes involve layered insurance policies whose coverage tier depends on whether the driver was logged off, logged on, en route to a passenger, or carrying one at the time of the crash.
  • Parking lot accidents. Low-speed collisions can still produce significant injuries, particularly to the neck and back. Liability often turns on right-of-way rules specific to private commercial lots.
  • Uninsured and underinsured motorist claims. When the at-fault driver lacks insurance or carries only minimum limits, the recovery shifts to your own policy. UM and UIM claims involve procedural rules and notice requirements that differ from third-party liability claims.

Why Choose Schmittgens Injury Law Firm for Car Accident Cases in St. Louis, MO?

Plaintiff-Side Auto Injury Experience

Founder Rob Schmittgens is a personal injury lawyer in St. Louis who has spent ten years representing plaintiffs in motor vehicle injury cases. He was admitted to the Missouri Bar in 2016 and to the Illinois Bar in 2017, with practice rights in the Eastern District of Missouri. Before opening Schmittgens Injury Law Firm, he handled auto injury and workers’ compensation claims at several area firms, taking matters from the initial intake through final resolution.

Rob graduated with honors from Quincy University in 2013 and earned his J.D. from the UMKC School of Law. His active memberships include the Missouri Association of Trial Attorneys, the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association, and the Bar Association of Metropolitan St. Louis (BAMSL).

Contingency Fee Representation

Auto injury matters at our firm are handled on a contingency fee basis. We do not bill hourly, we do not require retainers, and we advance the costs of investigation, records collection, deposition transcripts, and court filing fees on behalf of our clients. Our firm has secured millions of dollars recovered for clients across the cases we have handled. If we do not produce a recovery on your case, you owe us nothing for the time we have invested in it. This structure allows injured drivers to pursue legitimate claims regardless of their financial position at the time of the crash.

Understanding Car Accident Cases

Damages, Liability, and Compensation for Car Accident Cases

Compensation in Missouri auto injury cases falls into two categories that settle on different timelines. The property damage portion typically resolves within weeks. The bodily injury portion remains open until medical treatment concludes, and the property damage figure is not an indicator of the bodily injury value.
Common categories of auto recovery include:

  • Vehicle repair cost or fair market value if the vehicle is totaled
  • Diminished value for repaired vehicles with higher pre-loss value
  • Rental car coverage during the repair period
  • Medical expenses, including emergency and follow-up care
  • Lost wages and reduced future earning capacity
  • Pain and suffering and emotional distress

Liability in most car accident cases turns on negligence, and Missouri applies pure comparative fault to allocate responsibility between the parties. A driver found 30 percent at fault, for example, can still recover 70 percent of the established damages. Carriers are aware of this rule and routinely seek to assign higher fault percentages to the injured driver during negotiations, which makes early documentation of the scene, the police report, and any available video footage important to the value of the case.

The two damage categories also draw on different insurance coverages. Property damage is typically paid through collision coverage or the at-fault driver’s property liability limits. Bodily injury is paid through the at-fault driver’s bodily injury liability, MedPay coverage on the injured driver’s policy, and uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage when the at-fault driver lacks adequate limits.

Important Aspects in Your Car Accident Case

Several practical realities affect nearly every motor vehicle injury claim. Awareness of these issues from the outset of a case helps protect its value over the months that follow.

  • Insurance adjusters for the at-fault carrier represent the carrier’s interests, not yours
  • Recorded statements taken in the days following a crash often create complications later in the case
  • Black box and EDR data must be preserved before the vehicle is sold, repaired, or scrapped
  • Property damage settlement releases should be reviewed carefully and not signed alongside bodily injury releases
  • Soft tissue injuries often have delayed symptom onset, and treatment gaps over 30 days can give carriers grounds to argue the injuries have resolved

The vehicle itself can serve as evidence in liability disputes. Selling, repairing, or scrapping the car before the claim is documented can destroy data relevant to the cause of the crash.

Car Accident Case Timeline

Auto injury claims generally follow a predictable case timeline, though the duration varies with the severity of the injuries and the conduct of the insurance carrier.

  • Property damage and rental coordination, typically the first two weeks
  • Active medical treatment until maximum medical improvement is reached
  • Records and bills collected, demand letter prepared and submitted
  • Negotiation with the insurance carrier, generally 30 to 90 days
  • Filing suit if negotiations stall or available limits are insufficient
  • Discovery, depositions, and mediation, followed by trial or settlement

Settling the bodily injury portion of a claim before treatment is complete is a common error among injured drivers. Early offers may seem reasonable at the time but often fall short of the case’s actual value once treatment fully concludes. Once a settlement release is signed, no further compensation is available, even if the injury later requires surgery or long-term care.

What to Bring to Your Car Accident Consultation

Coming to your initial consultation prepared makes case evaluation more efficient.

  • The police crash report, or the report number for ordering a copy
  • Photographs of all involved vehicles, the accident scene, and any visible injuries
  • Insurance information for every driver involved, including a copy of your own declarations page
  • Medical records and bills received to date
  • Names and contact information for any witnesses

Documents you do not have at the time of the meeting can be requested on your behalf after we are retained. Initial consultations are provided at no cost and typically take approximately an hour, after which you will have a clear assessment of the claim, including the factors most likely to affect its value.

Missouri’s motor vehicle code and several federal data sources provide the legal and factual framework underlying most St. Louis car accident claims. The following resources may be helpful as you prepare for an initial consultation.

  • The Missouri financial responsibility law requires every motor vehicle owner to carry minimum auto liability coverage of 25/50/25, in addition to uninsured motorist protection. Operating a vehicle without the required coverage may result in license suspension and weakens any subsequent claim against an at-fault driver.
  • Missouri’s hands-free driving law, in full enforcement since January 2025, prohibits handheld electronic device use while operating a motor vehicle. Violations may support negligence claims when device use contributed to the crash.
  • The Missouri State Highway Patrol maintains crash records that are commonly used in cases occurring on state roads, highways, or interstates.
  • National crash data published by the NHTSA tracks fatality and injury trends across vehicle types and roadway conditions.
  • Federal injury statistics published by the CDC injury center provide reference data sometimes used in damages presentations.

These resources reflect general rules and available data. The value of any individual case depends on the specific facts of the crash, the medical evidence, and the carrier involved.

Reach Out to Schmittgens Injury Law Firm to Schedule a Consultation

If you’ve been injured in a car wreck in St. Louis, contact Schmittgens Injury Law Firm before providing a recorded statement to the at-fault carrier. We will review the police report, examine your insurance coverage, and provide an honest assessment of whether you have a case worth pursuing. Initial consultations are provided at no cost, and our representation is on a contingency basis, meaning no fees are owed unless we recover compensation on your behalf.

 

Contact Schmittgens Injury Law Firm

Your consultation is free and you pay nothing until Rob wins.