Looking for a personal-injury attorney in Philadelphia? Below: vetted firms covering Center City, University City, the Main Line, and South Philly, real PA cost ranges for contingency representation, and what PA law actually says about your situation. Most firms offer a free initial consultation.
7 vetted firms in Philadelphia handle personal injury cases. The shortlist below is editor-picked based on practice-area concentration, ratings, and client feedback.
Costs in Philadelphia track the national average.
Fee structure: Personal injury lawyers are paid on contingency in nearly every state. You pay nothing out of pocket; they take a percentage of your recovery.
Typical range: 33% pre-suit, 40% post-suit.
Up-front cost: $0 — no fee unless you win.
For a fuller breakdown of how lawyers actually price work across all 30 legal needs we cover, see our cost guide. The numbers above are 2026 averages; your specific quote will depend on the firm's experience level, the complexity of your case, and the firm's caseload at the moment you call.
Two ways to keep costs down in any Philadelphia personal injury matter: (1) come prepared to the first meeting with a one-page summary of facts, dates, and dollar amounts; (2) ask for a flat fee where one is offered — it removes the lawyer's incentive to take longer than necessary.
Statute of limitations: 2 years. This is when you have to file by — not when you have to settle by.
Court system: Court of Common Pleas.
Fault rules: Modified comparative (51% bar).
Damage caps: No general cap.
One thing to know: Pennsylvania allows full or limited tort election on auto policies — full tort costs more but preserves your right to sue for pain and suffering.
This page is a starting point, not a substitute for advice that applies to your specific situation. For that, talk to a licensed PA attorney — most of the firms above offer a free initial consultation for Philadelphia residents.
Most people hire a personal injury lawyer in Philadelphia after one of these triggers:
If any of these match what's happening to you, get a free consultation booked this week. Waiting rarely improves the case and often hurts it — evidence fades, witnesses move, and statute-of-limitations clocks keep running.
No. Personal injury lawyers in Philadelphia work on contingency — you pay nothing unless you win. The standard cut is 33% if your case settles before a lawsuit is filed and 40% if it goes to suit.
PA sets the deadline at 2 years. Miss the deadline and you usually lose your right to sue, regardless of how strong the case is.
Most Philadelphia personal injury cases settle within 6-18 months. Cases that go to trial typically take 18-36 months. Quick settlements are usually low offers.
Probably not. Roughly 95% of personal injury cases settle before trial. But the lawyer needs to be ready to try the case — that's what gets serious settlement offers.
PA uses Modified comparative (51% bar). Pennsylvania allows full or limited tort election on auto policies — full tort costs more but preserves your right to sue for pain and suffering.
Personal Injury elsewhere: Personal Injury lawyers in New YorkPersonal Injury lawyers in BostonPersonal Injury lawyers in Los Angeles
Other Philadelphia legal needs: Divorce lawyers in PhiladelphiaCriminal Defense / DUI lawyers in PhiladelphiaBankruptcy lawyers in Philadelphia
Background reading: Personal Injury guide · All Philadelphia firms · Top 10 Personal Injury firms in Philadelphia (full editorial picks) · How to compare law firms · Legal glossary
One short form. Free initial call. No obligation. Most firms respond within one business day.
Request Free Consultation