Pedestrian accidents in Georgia often produce catastrophic injuries — and disputed liability. Knowing your legal rights at crosswalks, mid-block locations, and unmarked intersections is essential for any pedestrian who has been hit by a vehicle.
Georgia Pedestrian Right-of-Way Laws
Under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-91, Georgia law provides pedestrians with right-of-way in marked crosswalks and at intersections with pedestrian control signals. Drivers must yield to pedestrians who are lawfully in a crosswalk and must not pass a vehicle that has stopped at a crosswalk to yield.
However, Georgia law also imposes duties on pedestrians. O.C.G.A. § 40-6-92 requires pedestrians to yield to vehicles when crossing outside of a marked crosswalk or at a location that is not an intersection. Crossing mid-block creates shared liability exposure — though it does not eliminate a driver’s independent duty to avoid striking a visible pedestrian.
Comparative Fault in Georgia Pedestrian Cases
Georgia’s modified comparative fault rule under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33 means that pedestrian fault reduces recovery proportionally and eliminates it entirely if the pedestrian is 50 percent or more at fault. Insurers use pedestrian location (in crosswalk vs. mid-block), signal status, visibility, and intoxication to push pedestrian fault allocation higher.
Key factors that affect fault allocation in Georgia pedestrian accident cases:
- Whether the crossing was at a marked or unmarked crosswalk
- Whether the pedestrian signal displayed WALK or DON’T WALK at crossing
- Whether the driver had adequate time and distance to stop
- Vehicle speed relative to the posted limit
- Pedestrian clothing visibility (nighttime, dark clothing)
- Driver distraction evidence (phone records, dashcam)
Distracted and Impaired Driver Liability
When a driver is texting, running a red light, or driving under the influence at the time of a pedestrian impact, liability is typically clear and significant. These cases often support punitive damage claims under O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1 in addition to full compensatory recovery.
Government Liability for Crosswalk Design
If a poorly designed or maintained crosswalk contributed to the crash — inadequate signage, missing pavement markings, obstructed sightlines — the municipality or GDOT may share liability. Claims against Georgia governments require ante-litem notice within 6 months for cities and 12 months for counties under O.C.G.A. § 36-11-1.
If you were hit by a vehicle in Georgia, a free pedestrian accident evaluation costs nothing and shows you exactly what your claim is worth. Call today.