Truck Accident Lawyers in Arkansas
Legal framework and trusted national firms serving Arkansas truck accident victims. State-specific SOL, comparative negligence, and damages-cap rules below — verified against the public statutes.
Arkansas sits on I-40 (transcontinental) and I-30 (Texas to Tennessee), making it a major Midwest-to-South freight corridor. Walmart, Tyson, and other major shippers are headquartered in Arkansas, generating substantial commercial truck volume.
Arkansas truck accident law — key points
Three legal questions affect almost every truck accident case in Arkansas. Each is governed by a public statute we link below — you can verify everything.
Statute of limitations
3 years for personal injury
3 years for wrongful death
Three years from date of injury for personal injury. Three years for wrongful death.
Comparative negligence rule
Modified comparative negligence (50% bar)
Arkansas follows modified comparative fault with a 50% bar (A.C.A. § 16-64-122). You can recover only if your fault is less than 50%.
Damages caps
No cap on compensatory damages
No statutory cap on compensatory damages. Punitive damages capped at $250K or 3× compensatory (A.C.A. § 16-55-208).
Top 1 truck accident law firms in Arkansas
Sorted by our editorial score. Each firm has been reviewed with our public methodology and verified across multiple data sources. Click any firm to see the full side-by-side comparison.
- 1
Morgan & Morgan
Google ★ 4.6 · 12,362 reviews Editorial 9.2/10 · Multi-state cases and large-volume PISee full profile and sources →
Arkansas truck accident guides
Deadline
Statute of limitations
3-year deadline, tolling exceptions, government claim deadlines.
Action guide
What to do after a truck accident in Arkansas
24-hour, 7-day, 30-day checklists. What to never do. State-specific warnings.
Settlement data
Average settlement amounts in Arkansas
Typical ranges by injury severity, calibrated to Arkansas jury tradition and damages caps.
Fault rules
Arkansas comparative negligence explained
How Arkansas divides fault, with recovery examples at every fault percentage.
All US states we cover (legal framework + firms where reviewed): Texas, California, Illinois, Florida, Georgia, Arizona, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, New Jersey, North Carolina, Tennessee, Michigan, Massachusetts, Maryland, Virginia, Indiana, Wisconsin, Missouri, Minnesota, Washington, Colorado, Alabama, Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Utah, Vermont, West Virginia, Wyoming.
States with similar laws to Arkansas
Same comparative-fault rule (modified-50): Illinois, Florida, Georgia, Tennessee.