Free Evaluation

A free Georgia accident claim evaluation is a no-cost, no-obligation conversation with an experienced Georgia personal injury attorney about the specific facts of your accident and what your claim may be worth. It costs nothing and can change your outcome significantly.

What Happens During the Evaluation

During your free evaluation, a Georgia accident attorney reviews:

  • The accident facts — How the crash occurred, who was at fault, and what evidence exists to establish liability
  • Your injuries and treatment — The nature and severity of your injuries, your current treatment status, and the medical documentation you have gathered
  • Your damages — A realistic estimate of medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and total claim value based on your specific situation
  • The applicable deadlines — The two-year personal injury statute and any government ante-litem notice deadlines that apply to your case
  • The insurance picture — What coverage is available from the at-fault driver and whether your own UM/UIM policy needs to be involved

Why It Costs Nothing

Georgia personal injury attorneys handle accident cases on a contingency fee basis. This means the attorney takes no upfront fee and earns no compensation unless they successfully recover for you. A free evaluation costs nothing because the attorney’s compensation comes from the recovery — not from you. If they take your case, you pay nothing out of pocket throughout the entire process.

What You Should Bring to the Evaluation

The more information you can share, the more useful the evaluation will be:

  • The police report or crash report number
  • Any medical records or bills you have received so far
  • Photographs of vehicles, injuries, and the accident scene
  • Your auto insurance declarations page (showing your coverage limits)
  • The at-fault driver’s insurance information

You do not need to have all of this — the evaluation is useful even if you only have a basic account of what happened. Your attorney can help gather documentation as part of representation.

Act Before the Deadline

The two-year statute of limitations under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 runs from the date of your accident. The earlier you act, the more options you have. Evidence degrades, witnesses become unavailable, and critical documentation can be lost. A free evaluation today costs nothing and protects everything.

Call now or submit the form on this page to request your free Georgia accident claim evaluation.

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