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Pedestrian Accident Settlement Calculator

Estimate your pedestrian accident settlement with state fault rules, crosswalk priority analysis, and hit-and-run compensation options

Last reviewed: April 2026

$209 billion in real payouts analyzed · See what we found
Step 1 of 3

Your Injury

$

Your Estimated Settlement

$36,000 — $66,000

Pain & Suffering
$45,000
Medical Bills
$15,000
Lost Wages
$5,000
Out-of-Pocket
$1,000

Total (mid-range)$51,000
Estimate based on the industry-standard multiplier method used by insurance adjusters and personal injury attorneys nationwide

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Add your details and we'll email you a state-specific report — including comparable verdicts and what attorneys typically settle for in your area.

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Editorially Reviewed — Content reviewed for accuracy using published legal research, government data, and verified court records. See our methodology

Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated May 15, 2026

How Pedestrian Accident Settlements Are Calculated

Pedestrian accidents produce some of the most severe injuries in personal injury law because pedestrians have zero physical protection against a 3,000-pound vehicle. Settlement values reflect this reality — the Insurance Information Institute reports that the average bodily injury claim severity for pedestrians is 2-3× higher than for vehicle occupants in comparable collisions.

According to GHSA, 7,522 US pedestrians were killed in 2022 — the highest total in over 40 years and a 77% increase since 2010. The NHTSA reports approximately 104,000 pedestrians required emergency treatment in 2022. Yet pedestrians often struggle to recover fair compensation due to limited driver insurance and state-specific crosswalk and jaywalking rules.

Our calculator applies the multiplier method (3-5× medical bills for pedestrian injuries, reflecting severity) and factors in your state's fault rules and hit-and-run options. See our settlement map for regional verdict data.

Average Pedestrian Accident Settlement by Severity

Injury TypeTypical RangeNotes
Minor bumps / scrapes$5,000 – $25,000Bruising, strains, full recovery
Broken bones$50,000 – $200,000Pedestrian fractures often involve legs/hips
Concussion / mild TBI$75,000 – $400,000Head hitting pavement common in pedestrian crashes
Severe TBI / internal injuries$250,000 – $2,000,000+Multiple surgeries, long rehab
Permanent impairment / disability$500,000 – $5,000,000+Lifelong care, lost earning capacity
Wrongful death$750,000 – $8,000,000+Pedestrian deaths produce highest PI verdicts

Factors That Affect Your Settlement

  • Crosswalk vs. Jaywalking: A pedestrian struck in a marked crosswalk with a walk signal has the strongest case. Outside crosswalks, jaywalking laws apply — most states (except Kansas, Nevada, Virginia which largely decriminalized in 2021-2023) treat jaywalking as contributory fault. However, jaywalking rarely bars recovery entirely — drivers still have duty to avoid pedestrians.
  • Driver's Speed and Conduct: Most pedestrian fatalities involve vehicles traveling above speed limit. Distracted driving (texting, phone use), impaired driving, and failing to yield at crosswalks create strong liability. AAA research shows pedestrian survival rate at 20 mph is 90%; at 40 mph, only 15%.
  • Visibility Conditions: Night-time pedestrian accidents (when visibility is low) produce comparative-fault arguments from insurers. Wearing reflective clothing helps but isn't required. Drivers bear responsibility for driving within their visibility — 'outdriving your headlights' is legally negligent in most states.
  • Insurance Coverage: Pedestrian injuries are typically covered by the at-fault driver's bodily injury liability. Many state minimums are $25K/$50K — inadequate for serious pedestrian injuries. Pedestrians can also use their own auto UM/UIM coverage (critical), PIP/MedPay (immediate medical), and health insurance. Some no-fault states extend PIP to pedestrians automatically.
  • Age and Vulnerability: Children under 10 and adults over 65 account for disproportionate share of pedestrian fatalities. Child pedestrian cases command higher non-economic damages due to lifelong impact. Elderly pedestrian cases may face pre-existing condition defenses but 'eggshell plaintiff' rule still applies.

The Pedestrian Safety Crisis

The US is experiencing a historic pedestrian safety crisis. Understanding the scale explains why verdicts in these cases are rising.

  • 7,522 pedestrian deaths in 2022 (GHSA) — the highest in 40+ years and a 77% increase from 2010.
  • 105,000 pedestrian injuries required ER treatment in 2022 (NHTSA).
  • Pedestrian deaths account for 17% of all traffic fatalities — despite pedestrians making <5% of total road trips.
  • 65% of pedestrian deaths occur at night. Darkness dramatically reduces driver visibility and reaction time.
  • 75% of pedestrian deaths occur outside intersections — not in crosswalks. But many of these are still legal pedestrian movements (sidewalks, road shoulders, driveways).
  • New Mexico, Arizona, Florida, Louisiana, and Mississippi lead the country in pedestrian death rate. Northeastern states (Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York) are relatively safer.

Crosswalk Laws: Priority, Fault, and Recovery

Understanding your state's crosswalk rules determines how strong your case is.

Marked Crosswalks

Marked crosswalks: Painted lines clearly indicate pedestrian priority. Drivers must yield. Violating creates per-se negligence in most states.

Unmarked Crosswalks

Unmarked crosswalks: Every intersection of two paved roads has legal crosswalks at each corner, even if not painted. Most states recognize this. Drivers at intersections without marked crosswalks still owe pedestrian duty.

Signalized Crosswalks

Signalized crosswalks: Walk/Don't Walk signals. Pedestrian must obey. Crossing on Walk sign: driver must stop. Crossing on Don't Walk: may be legally negligent per se depending on state.

Midblock Crossings

Midblock crossings: Between intersections. Usually considered jaywalking unless marked. Expect significant comparative fault.

Hit-and-Run: Your Options for Recovery

Hit-and-run accidents are particularly devastating because the at-fault driver's insurance may be unavailable. Five recovery avenues exist:

  1. UM/UIM on your auto policy: Covers hit-and-run pedestrian injuries. Most important coverage for any pedestrian. Claim must be made with your insurer, typically within 30-180 days of accident. Police report required.
  2. PIP/MedPay on your auto policy: Covers immediate medical bills regardless of fault. $5K-$100K depending on state.
  3. Health insurance: Covers medical bills but will assert lien rights on any settlement you receive later.
  4. Uninsured motorist fund: Some states (New York, Maryland, North Carolina) have state funds that compensate pedestrian victims when driver is uninsured or unknown.
  5. Crime victim compensation: Many states have crime victim funds. Hit-and-run is a crime. Typical benefits: $25K-$50K for medical expenses and lost wages.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average pedestrian accident settlement?

Pedestrian accident settlements average $75,000-$500,000 for moderate injuries. Severe injuries (surgery, TBI, permanent impairment) commonly exceed $1 million. Wrongful death cases for pedestrians often exceed $1-2 million because of the severity and preventability. Minor cases (bruising, full recovery) settle for $10K-$50K.

What if I was jaywalking when hit?

Jaywalking doesn't bar recovery in most states but reduces it through comparative fault. Expect 30-50% reduction in comparative states. In contributory negligence states (AL, MD, NC, VA, DC), jaywalking may bar recovery entirely. Several states have decriminalized jaywalking recently — California (2023), Virginia (2021), Nevada (2021), Kansas (2023) — reducing comparative fault arguments.

Does the driver have to see me for it to be their fault?

No. Drivers have a legal duty to keep proper lookout and avoid pedestrians. 'I didn't see them' is not a defense. A driver who was speeding, distracted, or driving beyond their headlight range can be liable even if they genuinely didn't see the pedestrian. Most cases turn on whether a reasonable driver in the same conditions would have seen and avoided the pedestrian.

What if the driver was uninsured or hit-and-run?

Use your own UM/UIM auto coverage — it covers pedestrians too. In no-fault states, PIP covers immediate medical bills regardless of fault. Some states have uninsured motorist funds (NY MVAIC). Many cities have crime victim compensation programs for hit-and-run. Police report within 24 hours is critical for all these options.

Are pedestrian settlements higher than vehicle accident settlements?

Yes, generally. Pedestrians suffer more severe injuries per impact due to lack of protection. Same 35 mph collision: vehicle occupant with airbags/seatbelts may have whiplash ($5K-15K); pedestrian may have multiple fractures and TBI ($100K-500K). Pedestrian wrongful death verdicts routinely exceed car-occupant wrongful death because severity is higher.

Do I need a lawyer for a pedestrian accident?

Strongly recommended for anything beyond minor injuries. Pedestrian cases often involve disputed fault (crosswalk vs. jaywalking), multiple insurance policies (driver's, your own UM/UIM, PIP, health insurance, homeowner's), and potentially government liability (dangerous intersections, inadequate signage). Most attorneys work contingency (33%) and often recover 3-4× more than pro-se.

Can I sue the city for a dangerous intersection?

Sometimes. Government entities can be liable for 'known dangerous conditions' — inadequate lighting, missing crosswalks, broken pedestrian signals, poor sight-lines. Notice requirements are strict (typically 30-180 days from incident). Damage caps often apply. Government liability is harder to establish than private liability but worth investigating in serious cases.

What if the driver says I darted out?

'Sudden emergency' is a common defense. To succeed, driver must prove they were (1) driving reasonably, (2) faced with sudden pedestrian appearance, (3) had no time to react. Adults rarely 'dart out' — usually crosswalk or visible approach. Children ARE unpredictable — case law generally holds drivers to higher standards near schools, parks, residential areas. Witness testimony and accident reconstruction are critical.

How long do I have to file a pedestrian accident claim?

Most states: 2-3 years from the accident date. California: 2 years. Texas: 2 years. Florida: 4 years. New York: 3 years. Government claims: 30-180 day notice. Wrongful death: 2 years from death. Children's claims often tolled until age of majority — but don't wait; evidence degrades quickly.

What if I was hit while in a crosswalk?

Strong case. Pedestrians in marked crosswalks with walk signals have right-of-way in all 50 states. Drivers must yield. Even unmarked crosswalks (every intersection of a paved road technically has unmarked crosswalks at the corners) often grant pedestrian priority. Settlements for crosswalk-hit pedestrians average 40-60% higher than jaywalking cases.

Related Research

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