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Dallas Motorcycle Accident Lawyer | The Longhorn Law Firm
Dallas · Dallas County · Texas

Dallas motorcycle accident lawyer.

From the High Five interchange to the busy surface streets of Uptown, Dallas produces some of the most serious motorcycle crashes in Texas. We handle them with the urgency these injuries demand.

Licensed in TX & NM
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Dallas's freeway interchanges and high-speed surface streets produce a steady volume of serious motorcycle crashes. The injuries are typically severe, the insurance defense argument is predictable (the rider was reckless), and the evidence — particularly nearby surveillance footage — disappears within days if no one preserves it.

The Longhorn Law Firm represents motorcycle crash victims across Dallas and Dallas County. See our motorcycle accident practice page →

Dallas riding context.

Major Roadways

I-635 (LBJ Freeway), US-75 (Central Expressway), the Dallas North Tollway, I-35E, I-30, and the President George Bush Turnpike.

Local Courts

Dallas County Civil District Courts at the George L. Allen Sr. Courts Building (600 Commerce St.) and the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division.

Trauma Care

Parkland Health (Level I trauma), Baylor University Medical Center, Methodist Dallas Medical Center, and UT Southwestern Medical Center.

Why It Matters Here

Dallas has some of the most heavily trafficked freeway interchanges in Texas — the High Five at LBJ/Central, the downtown Mixmaster, and the I-635/I-35E split — that concentrate severe crashes.

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.

  • Left-turn crashes — a car turns left across an oncoming motorcycle's lane (the most common type)
  • Lane-change crashes — a car changes lanes into a motorcycle in the blind spot
  • Rear-end at a stop — a car fails to brake and hits a stopped motorcycle
  • Dooring — parked vehicle opens a door into a rider's path
  • Road-defect crashes — potholes, gravel, debris that endanger riders
  • Drunk-driving crashes — disproportionately fatal for motorcyclists

Common motorcycle injuries.

  • Traumatic brain injuries — concussions, severe TBI, even with helmet use
  • Spinal cord injuries — including paralysis
  • Road rash — far more serious than the name suggests, frequently requiring grafting
  • Multiple fractures — clavicles, wrists, ribs, pelvis, femurs
  • Amputations — particularly leg amputations in crush injuries
  • Internal organ injuries from impact and friction

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.

  • The crash report and 911 audio
  • Scene photography showing impact angles, skid marks, and debris pattern
  • Motorcycle damage analysis — which side, where, helps reconstruct the crash mechanism
  • Helmet and gear examination — extent of damage tells the story of the impact
  • Surveillance footage from nearby businesses (preserved fast)
  • Dashcam from any other involved vehicle
  • Visibility analysis — was the motorcycle's headlight on, were the rider's clothes high-visibility, was the driver's sight line obstructed
  • Cell phone records if distraction is suspected
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 →

Dallas motorcycle accident questions.

What if the motorcycle crash was at the High Five or another complex Dallas interchange?+
Multi-vehicle freeway crashes involving motorcycles are particularly serious and often involve disputed liability. We use crash reconstruction, surveillance video from nearby businesses, and EDR data from any cars involved to establish what happened.
Does Texas's helmet law affect my Dallas case?+
Adults 21+ can ride helmetless if they've completed a training course or carry $10K in medical coverage. Insurance carriers still try to argue no-helmet as comparative fault. We push back with the statute.
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.

Hit on a motorcycle in Dallas?

Free consultation, no fee unless we win. We move fast — and we don't accept jury-bias defenses without a fight.