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Laredo · Webb County · Texas

Laredo slip and fall lawyer.

A wet floor, a torn carpet, an unlit stairwell. Property owners in Laredo owe their visitors a duty of reasonable care. When they breach it, the medical bills aren't your problem. We know how big retailers defend these claims, and how to break their playbook.

Licensed in TX & NM
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Slip-and-fall cases in Laredo aren't easy — defendants (particularly major retailers) have decades of experience defending these claims. The notice requirement under Texas premises liability law (the {property owner} "knew or should have known" the hazard existed) creates a real evidentiary burden. But when surveillance footage, employee testimony, and inspection-policy records line up properly, these cases win.

The Longhorn Law Firm handles slip-and-fall cases throughout Laredo — including at HEB, Walmart, Target, Lowe's, and other retailers, restaurants, hotels, apartment complexes, and parking lots. See our full overview of slip and fall cases ?

Laredo context.

Major Roadways

I-35 (which terminates here at the Mexico border — the start of the NAFTA freight corridor), US-83 north to Eagle Pass, US-59 east to Houston, and Loop 20 around the city.

Local Courts

Webb County Courthouse and the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas, Laredo Division.

Trauma Care

Laredo Medical Center and Doctors Hospital of Laredo.

Why It Matters Here

Laredo is the largest inland port in the United States — the gateway for commercial freight between Mexico and the U.S. interior. I-35 begins here, and the city's industrial corridors carry massive truck volume around the clock. The combination of cross-border commerce, heavy truck traffic, and the city's distinctive Spanish-speaking population shapes every personal injury case in Webb County.

What you have to prove.

Premises liability is more demanding than many people assume. To win, we have to show:

The biggest battleground is usually the second element — "actual or constructive notice." Stores routinely argue that the spill "just happened" and they had no time to address it. We defeat that defense with inspection logs, sweep records, prior incident reports, surveillance footage, and the testimony of employees and witnesses.

Common Laredo fall scenarios.

Right After a Fall
What to do — and what NOT to do.

Do: Report the fall to the manager and ask for a written incident report. Photograph the hazard, your injuries, and the area. Get witness contact info. Save the shoes and clothes you were wearing. Get medical care.

Don't: Sign anything the store gives you. Don't give a recorded statement. Don't accept a quick "we'll cover your bills" offer in exchange for a release.

Common injuries.

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.

Texas deadlines.

Two years from the date of the fall 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 ?

Laredo slip and fall questions.

What do I have to prove in a Texas slip-and-fall case?+
Generally: (1) the property owner knew or should have known about the dangerous condition, (2) you didn't know about it and couldn't reasonably have seen it, (3) the owner failed to take reasonable steps to fix or warn about it, and (4) that failure caused your injury. Each element requires evidence — and the property owner will dispute every one.
How long do I have to file a slip-and-fall case?+
Generally 2 years from the date of the fall under Tex. CPRC § 16.003. If the property owner was a governmental entity (a public building, public sidewalk, etc.), the Texas Tort Claims Act 6-month notice rule also applies. Don't wait.
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 Laredo Cases

More Laredo injury cases.

Fall in Laredo? Don't go it alone.

Premises liability cases require fast investigation — surveillance footage, witness statements, inspection records all have short windows. Free consultation in Laredo and across Webb County.

Nearby service areas.

We also handle slip & fall lawyer cases in these nearby Texas communities: