Settlement data · Updated 2026-05-22
Colorado truck accident settlement amounts
What truck accident cases typically settle for in Colorado, by injury severity — with the legal factors that move outcomes up or down in this specific state.
Typical Colorado settlement ranges by severity
The single biggest factor in settlement value is injury severity. Within each tier, the actual amount depends on liability strength, defendant deep-pockets (e.g., trucking company vs. solo driver), and Colorado jury tradition.
Minor injuries
$4,750 – $23,750
Bruises, sprains, ER visit. Mostly recovered within months.
Moderate injuries
$23,750 – $142,500
Broken bones, hospital stay, ongoing treatment.
Severe injuries
$142,500 – $712,500
Major surgery, long recovery, lasting impact on daily life.
Catastrophic injuries
$712,500 – $4,750,000
TBI, paralysis, amputation, permanent disability.
Wrongful death
$475,000 – $2,850,000
Includes economic loss + survivor non-economic damages.
Why Colorado specifically
- Comparative negligence: Colorado uses modified comparative with a 50% bar. If your fault is 50%+, you recover nothing. This causes a "fault discount" effect on settlement values where any fault attribution risk reduces offers.
- Damages caps: Colorado CAPS non-economic damages. This limits the upper range — especially for catastrophic injuries where pain and suffering would otherwise dominate the award. See full caps detail on our Colorado state law page.
- Jury tradition: Colorado juries are roughly national-average for trucking cases. State-level multiplier ~0.95×.
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What goes INTO a settlement amount
- Economic damages — medical bills (past + future), lost wages (past + future), property damage, out-of-pocket expenses. These are the most easily documented and least disputed.
- Non-economic damages — pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment, emotional distress, disfigurement. Typically calculated as a multiplier (1.5×–5×) of economic damages. In Colorado, capped — see state page for the limit.
- Punitive damages — only when the trucking company's conduct rises to gross negligence (e.g., hours-of-service violations, knowingly-defective brakes, drug-impaired driver). Rare but can dwarf compensatory damages.
- Liability share — comparative fault reduces all of the above by your fault percentage.
- Policy limits — even with strong damages, the settlement is constrained by the trucking company's insurance policy limits. Federal regulations require commercial carriers to maintain $750K minimum policy, though most carry $5M-$25M+ in tower coverage.
Methodology — how these ranges are computed
We start from national-average settlement ranges aggregated by injury severity from public verdict reporting (Jury Verdict Reporter, court records, insurer disclosure filings, news coverage of major cases). We then apply state-level multipliers calibrated to three factors:
- Comparative negligence rule (plaintiff- vs defense-favorable)
- Damages cap presence (does it limit upper-range outcomes?)
- Jury tradition (state-level historical plaintiff/defense lean)
For Colorado, the state-level multiplier is ~0.95× vs the national-average base ranges shown by injury tier.
Last updated 2026-05-22. NOT a prediction. NOT legal advice. See our disclaimer for the full caveats. For your specific case talk to a Colorado truck accident attorney.