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Cibolo · Guadalupe County · Texas

Cibolo motorcycle accident lawyer.

Motorcycle cases face an uphill battle from the start — adjusters and many jurors assume the rider was at fault. We build the case to defeat that assumption from day one with real evidence.

Licensed in TX & NM
MILLIONS+ Recovered
No Fee Unless We Win
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Riding a motorcycle in Cibolo is dangerous in ways that don't apply to cars: drivers don't see you, road hazards that wouldn't matter in a car can put you down, and after a crash you face medical bills and insurance pushback that assumes you were riding recklessly. The case is winnable — but it requires building the right evidence early.

The Longhorn Law Firm represents motorcycle crash victims across Cibolo and Guadalupe County. See our motorcycle accident practice page ?

Cibolo riding context.

Major Roadways

I-35 (just east), FM-1103, FM-78, FM-2538, and the Cibolo Valley Drive growth corridor.

Local Courts

Guadalupe County Courthouse in Seguin and the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, San Antonio Division.

Trauma Care

Northeast Methodist Hospital nearby, Baptist Emergency Hospital Schertz, and Level I trauma centers in San Antonio.

Why It Matters Here

Cibolo is one of the fastest-growing bedroom communities in the San Antonio metro, sitting on the northeast edge of Bexar County near Schertz. Heavy commuter traffic to Randolph AFB and downtown SA combines with rapidly expanding residential development to create real road-safety challenges, particularly along FM-1103 and the IH-35 access roads.

The jury-bias problem.

The Real Battle
Insurance companies count on the "reckless rider" stereotype.

The single biggest practical problem in a motorcycle case isn't the law — it's the assumption many jurors and adjusters bring to the table that motorcyclists are inherently reckless. Most aren't, and most motorcycle crashes are caused by the other driver: a left turn across the rider's path, a lane change without checking, a rear-end into a stopped motorcycle. We build the case to defeat that bias from day one, with crash reconstruction, visibility analysis, and rider-conduct evidence.

Texas helmet law.

Texas law (Transp. Code §661.003) requires helmets — but riders 21 or older can ride without a helmet if they (1) have completed an approved motorcycle operator training course or (2) carry at least $10,000 in medical coverage. Insurance companies routinely try to use the absence of a helmet as comparative-fault evidence even when it had nothing to do with the crash itself. We push back on that argument with the law and the facts.

Common motorcycle crash scenarios.

Common motorcycle injuries.

Motorcyclists are about 24 times more likely to die in a crash than a passenger-car occupant per mile traveled (NHTSA). That's not about rider behavior — it's about physics. Cases that would be modest injuries in a car are catastrophic on a motorcycle.

The evidence that builds these cases.

Insurance Tactics
The adjuster who calls is not on your side.

Insurance companies routinely call victims within hours, sounding friendly, asking for a "quick recorded statement," and floating a fast lowball offer before the victim has seen a doctor. Don't give a recorded statement. Don't accept an offer. Read our full guide on insurance company tactics before you say anything.

What your case could be worth.

Motorcycle case values reflect the severity of the typical injury. Cases involving surgery, amputation, traumatic brain injury, spinal injury, or fatality routinely run into six and seven figures. We never quote a number before reviewing a case, but motorcycle cases at our firm are evaluated for their full long-term medical, vocational, and emotional impact. Free case review ?

Texas deadlines.

Two years from the date of the crash to file (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §16.003). Cases against governmental entities require notice within much shorter windows — sometimes as little as six months. Texas applies modified comparative fault: you can still recover if you were 50% or less at fault. More on comparative fault ?

Cibolo motorcycle accident questions.

Does the helmet law affect my case in Texas?+
Texas adults 21+ can legally ride helmetless if they've completed a training course or carry $10K in medical coverage. Whether you wore a helmet generally cannot be used to defeat your case — but insurance companies still try, and we push back.
Will jurors assume the rider was at fault?+
Many will, initially. That's why building the case with reconstruction experts, scene photography, and helmet-cam or witness video evidence matters so much. We anticipate the bias and counter it with proof.
Can I still recover if I was partially at fault?+
In Texas, yes — as long as you were 50% or less at fault. Texas applies modified comparative fault with a 51% bar. Read our full guide on comparative fault ?
What if the insurance company already called me?+
Don't give a recorded statement, accept an offer, or sign anything. Read our guide on insurance company tactics, then call us — talking to us is free.
What if a government vehicle was involved?+
Cases against city, county, state, transit, or school district vehicles in Texas require notice within much shorter windows — sometimes just six months or less. Don't assume you have the full two-year statute.
More Cibolo Cases

More Cibolo injury cases.

Down on a bike in Cibolo?

Motorcycle cases take experienced counsel willing to fight the bias against riders. We've done it before, in Cibolo and across Texas.