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St. Petersburg Pedestrian Accident Lawyers Who Put the Blame Where It Belongs

Reviewed by , Jones Law Group | Published | Updated

There is nothing between a pedestrian and a moving car. No seatbelt, no airbag, no frame. That is why a person hit at 40 mph on US-19 suffers injuries that a driver in the same crash would walk away from, and why Florida consistently ranks among the deadliest states in the country for people on foot. If a driver hit you or someone you love while walking in St. Petersburg, the insurance company’s first move is often to blame the person who is lying in a hospital bed. A St. Petersburg pedestrian accident lawyer answers that with evidence. At Jones Law Group, we have recovered more than $50 million for injured clients across Tampa Bay, and we take pedestrian cases on contingency, so you pay nothing unless we win.

And here is the fact most people find surprising: even though you were on foot, car insurance, including PIP, almost certainly applies to your claim.

Why St. Petersburg is so dangerous for pedestrians

Pinellas County’s most dangerous roads for walkers share a design: wide, fast, multi-lane arterials lined with the shops, bus stops, and apartments people actually need to reach on foot. US-19 is the notorious example, with crossing distances of eight lanes or more and long gaps between signalized crosswalks. The 34th Street corridor, 4th Street North, and Gulf Boulevard along the beaches carry the same mix of speed and foot traffic. National “Dangerous by Design” analyses have repeatedly placed Florida metros, including Tampa Bay, near the top of the country’s pedestrian fatality rankings.

Why does road design belong on a law firm’s page? Because it rebuts the lazy story insurers tell. When the nearest crosswalk is a half mile away, a person crossing mid-block is not being reckless, and a driver speeding through a corridor full of bus stops is not blameless. We use crash data from Forward Pinellas to show exactly how the stretch of road where you were hit behaves.

Whose insurance pays when a pedestrian is hit?

Start with PIP. Florida’s no-fault system covers pedestrians struck by motor vehicles: if you own a car, your own policy pays your first $10,000 in medical bills and lost wages; if you do not, a resident relative’s policy can apply; and if there is no household policy at all, the driver’s PIP covers you. The catch is the same as every PIP claim: you must get initial medical treatment within 14 days.

PIP is nowhere near enough for a pedestrian injury, and the law knows it. Serious injuries let you pursue the at-fault driver’s bodily injury coverage directly for your full damages, including pain and suffering. If the driver fled, which happens in a shameful number of pedestrian crashes, or carried no coverage, your own uninsured motorist coverage can pay the claim. Finding and sequencing every available policy is the first job in these cases, and it is ours.

What Florida law actually says about right of way

Under Florida Statute § 316.130, drivers must yield to pedestrians in marked crosswalks and at intersections, and every driver, everywhere on the road, must “exercise due care to avoid colliding with any pedestrian.” That last part matters. Even where a pedestrian crosses outside a crosswalk, the driver still owes a duty of care, and a speeding, texting, or impaired driver breaches it.

So if you were hit mid-block, do not assume you have no case. Fault in Florida is shared by percentages under modified comparative negligence, and a jury can easily find the driver carried most of it. The insurer’s opening position that “the pedestrian came out of nowhere” is a negotiating posture, not a verdict.

Pedestrian Right of Way in Florida What Fla. Stat. § 316.130 actually requires In a marked crosswalk Drivers must stop or yield to a pedestrian crossing in the crosswalk. At a signalized intersection Pedestrians must obey walk signals, and turning drivers must still yield to people lawfully in the crossing. Mid-block, outside a crosswalk Pedestrians must yield to vehicles, but the driver’s duty of care does not disappear. ! Everywhere on the road Every driver must exercise due care to avoid colliding with any pedestrian. Speeding, texting, or impairment breaches it. Hit outside a crosswalk? You may still have a case. Florida’s modified comparative negligence rule bars recovery only if you are found more than 50% at fault. Jones Law Group · St. Petersburg, FL · (727) 571-1333 For general information only. Not legal advice. Fla. Stat. § 316.130.
Pedestrian right of way rules in Florida under Fla. Stat. § 316.130.

Is the insurer already blaming you or your family member? Do not give a recorded statement until you have talked to a lawyer. Call (727) 571-1333 for a free consultation.

Types of pedestrian accident cases we handle

These are the pedestrian cases we see most often in St. Petersburg, each with its own evidence trail.

Crosswalk and intersection crashes

Drivers turning left or right through a crosswalk while looking at car traffic instead of the person in front of them. Signal timing records and intersection cameras are key, and the footage gets erased quickly.

Mid-block and arterial crossings

The US-19 pattern: long distances between crosswalks and high speeds. These are the cases where road design evidence and driver speed matter most.

Parking lot and driveway crashes

Low speed does not mean low injury, especially for children and older adults. Store and lot surveillance video usually exists, briefly.

Hit-and-run pedestrian crashes

We work alongside the police investigation while pursuing your uninsured motorist coverage, so your recovery does not depend on the driver being caught.

Crashes involving children and seniors

Drivers owe heightened care near school zones and bus stops, and Florida law does not judge a child’s conduct by adult standards. These cases are handled with the added care they deserve.

The injuries pedestrians face, and the local care behind your claim

Pedestrian injuries sit at the severe end of the spectrum: traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, pelvic and leg fractures from the initial impact, and secondary injuries from hitting the pavement. The most serious cases in Pinellas County go to Orlando Health Bayfront Hospital, the county’s only Level II trauma center, and injured children are often treated at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital nearby. Those records document your damages, and we know how to obtain and present them from each facility.

What is my St. Petersburg pedestrian accident claim worth?

No lawyer can promise a number. Value turns on the severity and permanence of your injuries, the fault evidence, and the insurance available. Florida splits damages into two categories. Economic damages cover medical bills, future care, lost wages, and lost earning capacity, which are often substantial after a pedestrian crash because recovery is long. Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering, mental anguish, scarring, and loss of enjoyment of life, frequently the largest part of a serious pedestrian claim.

The insurer’s main lever is comparative fault, arguing you were outside a crosswalk, wearing dark clothing, or looking at your phone, to shave percentages off the payout. Every percentage point is money, which is why we contest fault with physical evidence, video, and reconstruction rather than letting the driver’s story stand. For more on valuation, see our guide on how much a Florida injury settlement is worth and our two-year deadline guide.

Hospital bills arriving faster than answers? We can usually tell you in one free call which insurance applies and what your next step is. Call (727) 571-1333.

Why injured St. Pete pedestrians choose Jones Law Group

Jones Law Group is led by attorney Bobby Jones, a U.S. Air Force veteran and Stetson Law graduate who has practiced personal injury law in Tampa Bay for more than 20 years. We have recovered over $50 million for injured clients and hold a 4.9 rating on Google. Pedestrian cases are won by out-preparing the blame-the-victim defense, and we build them that way from the first week. We work on contingency, so we only get paid when you do. You can see the full range of cases we handle on our St. Petersburg personal injury lawyer page.

Frequently asked questions

Can I recover if I was hit outside a crosswalk?

Often yes. Florida drivers must exercise due care to avoid hitting any pedestrian, anywhere on the road, under Florida Statute § 316.130. Crossing outside a crosswalk may assign you a share of fault, but under Florida’s modified comparative negligence rule you can still recover as long as you are not more than 50% responsible.

I do not own a car. Whose insurance covers me as a pedestrian?

You are still covered. A pedestrian hit by a car can claim PIP through a resident relative’s auto policy, or through the at-fault driver’s PIP if there is no household policy. For serious injuries, the driver’s bodily injury coverage and potentially your household’s uninsured motorist coverage apply on top of that.

What if it was a hit-and-run?

You may still recover. Uninsured motorist coverage on your own or a household member’s auto policy can pay a hit-and-run pedestrian claim, and PIP can cover initial medical bills. Report the crash to police immediately and get medical treatment within 14 days to protect both claims.

Why does everyone say to see a doctor within 14 days?

Because Florida PIP benefits, which cover pedestrians hit by cars, only pay if you receive initial medical treatment within 14 days of the crash. Prompt treatment also documents your injuries before the insurer can argue they came from something else.

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

You generally have two years from the date of the crash to file a lawsuit, under Florida Statute § 95.11 as amended by HB 837 in 2023. Camera footage and witness memories fade far faster than that, so the practical deadline for building a strong case is much shorter.

How much does a St. Petersburg pedestrian accident lawyer cost?

Jones Law Group works on a contingency fee, with no up-front cost and no hourly bill. We only collect a fee if we recover money for you, and the initial consultation is free.

Talk to a St. Petersburg pedestrian accident lawyer today

A driver hit you. You should not have to fight the insurance company too. Tell us what happened in a free consultation, with no obligation and no fee unless we win.

Jones Law Group
5622 Central Avenue, St. Petersburg, FL 33707
Phone: (727) 571-1333
Email: [email protected]

Disclaimer: This page is for general information only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every case is different, and prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. The $50 million figure reflects total amounts recovered for clients over time, not a promise about any individual case. If you have a specific legal question, contact a licensed Florida attorney.

Can I recover if I was hit outside a crosswalk?

Often yes. Florida drivers must exercise due care to avoid hitting any pedestrian, anywhere on the road, under Florida Statute § 316.130. Crossing outside a crosswalk may assign you a share of fault, but under Florida’s modified comparative negligence rule you can still recover as long as you are not more than 50% responsible.

I do not own a car. Whose insurance covers me as a pedestrian?

You are still covered. A pedestrian hit by a car can claim PIP through a resident relative’s auto policy, or through the at-fault driver’s PIP if there is no household policy. For serious injuries, the driver’s bodily injury coverage and potentially your household’s uninsured motorist coverage apply on top of that.

What if it was a hit-and-run?

You may still recover. Uninsured motorist coverage on your own or a household member’s auto policy can pay a hit-and-run pedestrian claim, and PIP can cover initial medical bills. Report the crash to police immediately and get medical treatment within 14 days to protect both claims.

Why does everyone say to see a doctor within 14 days?

Because Florida PIP benefits, which cover pedestrians hit by cars, only pay if you receive initial medical treatment within 14 days of the crash. Prompt treatment also documents your injuries before the insurer can argue they came from something else.

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

You generally have two years from the date of the crash to file a lawsuit, under Florida Statute § 95.11 as amended by HB 837 in 2023. Camera footage and witness memories fade far faster than that, so the practical deadline for building a strong case is much shorter.

How much does a St. Petersburg pedestrian accident lawyer cost?

Jones Law Group works on a contingency fee, with no up-front cost and no hourly bill. We only collect a fee if we recover money for you, and the initial consultation is free.

Talk to a St. Petersburg pedestrian accident lawyer today

A driver hit you. You should not have to fight the insurance company too. Tell us what happened in a free consultation, with no obligation and no fee unless we win.

Jones Law Group
5622 Central Avenue, St. Petersburg, FL 33707
Phone: (727) 571-1333
Email: [email protected]

Disclaimer: This page is for general information only and is not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Every case is different, and prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. The $50 million figure reflects total amounts recovered for clients over time, not a promise about any individual case. If you have a specific legal question, contact a licensed Florida attorney.

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Jones Law Group logo, Personal Injury Lawyer in St Petersburg Florida

Jones Law Group is a dedicated personal injury lawyer in St. Petersburg, FL, serving the Tampa Bay area since 2006. Our experienced attorneys specialize in car accidents, slip and fall cases, employment law disputes, construction law issues, and overtime wage claims, fighting for maximum compensation on a contingency fee basis. Contact us for a free consultation to discuss your case.

5622 Central Avenue, St. Petersburg, FL 33707

Call our personal injury law office at (727) 512-9847

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