A car wreck in Lubbock sets off a fast-moving sequence of decisions — medical, financial, legal. Most people don't realize that the first few weeks after a crash matter more than the next year. Insurance adjusters call early, hoping for a recorded statement before you understand your own injuries. We exist to make sure those early moves don't end up costing you your case.
The Longhorn Law Firm handles car accident claims throughout Lubbock and Lubbock County. See our full overview of car accident cases ?
Lubbock crashes by the numbers.
Major Roadways
I-27 (the only U.S. interstate route that ends in Texas without continuing to another state), US-82 east-west, US-84 northwest-southeast, US-87, and Loop 289 around the city.
Local Courts
Lubbock County Civil District Courts at the Lubbock County Courthouse (904 Broadway St., Lubbock) and the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Lubbock Division.
Trauma Care
University Medical Center (UMC, Level I trauma — the only Level I trauma center in the South Plains and parts of eastern NM), Covenant Medical Center, and Grace Medical Center.
Why It Matters Here
Lubbock is the regional commercial and medical hub for the South Plains and parts of eastern New Mexico. As home to Texas Tech University, it sees seasonal traffic spikes during the academic year. Heavy agricultural and oil-field commercial truck traffic moves through Loop 289 and the surrounding US highways year-round. The Lubbock UMC trauma center serves a vast catchment area, so serious injury patients from far outside the city limits regularly end up here.
Common Lubbock car accident injuries.
- Whiplash and cervical injuries — often dismissed by insurers but capable of becoming chronic
- Herniated discs and back injuries — frequently requiring injections or surgery
- Traumatic brain injuries (TBI), including delayed-symptom concussions
- Fractures — wrists, ribs, ankles, pelvis
- Internal injuries from seat belt and airbag impact
- Post-traumatic stress and anxiety — real and compensable
The evidence that builds your case.
- The crash report filed by LPD, state troopers, or the responding agency
- 911 audio and dispatch records
- Photographs of vehicles, scene, lane positions, and injuries
- Surveillance footage from nearby businesses — frequently overwritten within 7-30 days
- Cell phone records if distracted driving is suspected
- Event data recorder ("black box") showing pre-impact speed and braking
- Witness statements taken while memories are fresh
- Your contemporaneous medical records
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.
It depends on the injuries, the liability, the available insurance, and the lost income. Damages can include past and future medical expenses, lost wages and earning capacity, property damage, pain and suffering, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, and — in drunk-driving or grossly negligent cases — punitive damages. We never quote a specific figure before reviewing a case, but we'll give an honest range during your free consultation.
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 ?
What we do differently.
Founder Shawn Barnett has personally been hit head-on by a drunk driver and, separately, struck on the side of his truck by an 18-wheeler. He understands recovery — surgery, rehab, the mental toll — in a way most attorneys cannot. We're licensed in Texas and New Mexico, we work in English and Spanish, and we don't charge anything unless we win.