A careless driver can turn a short walking trip into months of medical appointments, missed work, and confusing insurance letters. Many pedestrians assume the driver’s insurer will “do the right thing”, only to find their crossing blamed on not paying attention.
At Boesen Law, we know most pedestrian crashes are preventable and often tied to the same patterns we see in motor vehicle cases: distracted driving, speeding in busy corridors, and failures to yield at crosswalks. Our Aurora car accident lawyers regularly handle pedestrian claims, and we understand how to document those collisions in a way that insurance companies can’t easily minimize or ignore.
Reach out to our law firm for a no-cost, no-obligation consultation today. Call our personal injury lawyers in the state of Colorado at (303) 999-9999 or contact us online.
How Boesen Law Helps After a Pedestrian Accident in Aurora
When a vehicle strikes a pedestrian, the bigger challenge is often convincing the driver’s insurance company that the crash was preventable, that you followed traffic rules, and that the full scope of harm goes beyond what shows up on an initial X-ray. Adjusters in pedestrian cases are trained to scrutinize every detail: the exact spot where you crossed, whether street lighting was adequate, whether you were distracted by your phone. Their goal is to find a reason—any reason—to argue that you share blame or that your injuries are not as serious as you claim.
Boesen Law’s approach is to get ahead of that resistance from day one. When you work with us, you can expect your Aurora pedestrian accident lawyer to:
- Investigate how the collision happened, including driver distractions, speeding, failure to yield, or lighting and visibility problems at the scene.
- Gather and organize medical records, imaging studies, and provider testimony that explain the full impact of your injuries.
- Handle all communication with the driver’s insurer and your own carrier, including uninsured or underinsured motorist claims when coverage is limited.
- Evaluate every available insurance policy, from the driver’s liability coverage to potential commercial or municipal policies, so you are not leaving compensation on the table.
From the moment you call, our goal is to lift the legal and insurance burden from your shoulders. Our team combines local knowledge of Aurora’s streets with decades of personal injury experience to build strong, evidence-driven cases. In one recent matter, we secured a $390,000 recovery for a pedestrian struck by a driver who ran a stop sign. We invite you to discuss your situation in a free consultation where we can evaluate your case and explore your options.
Common Causes of Pedestrian Accidents in Aurora
Many Aurora pedestrian crashes follow patterns we see throughout the metro area. Busy multi-lane roads, high-speed corridors, and nighttime traffic all increase risk, especially where crosswalks are spaced far apart. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, more than 7,500 pedestrians were killed nationwide in 2022, the highest number in four decades. Similarly, the Colorado Department of Transportation reported that pedestrian deaths make up a significant share of statewide traffic fatalities, with over a hundred pedestrians killed in 2022 alone. These accidents often involve:
- Drivers turning left across crosswalks without checking for people already in the intersection.
- Speeding or aggressive driving on arterial roads like Colfax, Chambers, or Parker Road.
- Nighttime driving, where poor lighting or dark clothing makes pedestrians harder to see.
- Distracted driving, including smartphone use, infotainment systems, and in-vehicle distractions that pull a driver’s eyes off the road.
- Vehicles backing out of driveways or parking lots into sidewalks or pedestrian paths.
When we investigate your case, we look beyond the police report to understand whether road design, sight obstructions, or repeated complaints about a dangerous intersection may provide additional leverage in negotiations.
How Colorado Law Treats Pedestrian Accidents and Fault
In Colorado, drivers must yield to pedestrians in crosswalks and exercise reasonable care to avoid hitting people on foot. At the same time, pedestrians also have duties, such as obeying signals, crossing within marked or unmarked crosswalks, and following the state’s jaywalking laws.
These rules matter because insurers may try to shift blame away from the driver and onto the person who was hit. Even if the insurance adjuster claims you were jaywalking, for example, that does not automatically bar your case, as Colorado also uses a modified comparative negligence system.
This means an injured person can still recover compensation as long as their share of fault is less than 50%. If an insurer claims you “should have seen the car” or “stepped into traffic,” we review traffic camera footage where available, measure sightlines, and consult with reconstruction professionals so any percentage of fault assigned to you is grounded in evidence.
Injuries We Often See in Aurora Pedestrian Accidents
Even at neighborhood speeds, a collision between a car and a pedestrian can result in broken bones, internal bleeding, and head trauma that changes the course of a person’s life. Unlike occupants inside a vehicle, pedestrians have no airbags, no crumple zones, and no seatbelts. The result is that pedestrian injuries tend to be severe, and the recovery process is often long and uncertain.
Our team works with orthopedic specialists, neurologists, and rehabilitation experts to document injuries such as:
- Traumatic brain injuries, including concussions and more severe TBIs.
- Spinal cord trauma, vertebral fractures, and disc herniations.
- Complex fractures of the legs, pelvis, arms, and ribs.
- Internal organ damage and internal bleeding.
- Soft tissue injuries, including ligament tears and chronic pain syndromes.
- Facial injuries and scarring from striking the hood or windshield.
In the most serious cases, pedestrian crashes can lead to injuries that meet the legal definition of “catastrophic,” which often require ongoing care, home modifications, or assistive devices. Insurance adjusters will sometimes try to downplay the severity of your injuries by pointing to your age, your prior health, or the fact that you were discharged from the hospital after a few days. But discharge does not mean recovery.
Many of our clients leave the emergency room with fractures that require surgery, concussions that cause cognitive problems for months, or soft tissue damage that develops into chronic pain. If this happened to you, we make sure your claim accounts for the full trajectory of your injury—not just the snapshot the insurer wants to focus on.
Damages You Can Recover After a Pedestrian Accident
Colorado law recognizes several types of damages in a personal injury lawsuit. Depending on the facts of your case, recoverable damages may include:
- Medical expenses, from ambulance transport and surgeries to physical therapy, medications, and assistive devices.
- Future medical care, including follow-up surgeries, pain management, and long-term rehabilitation or counseling.
- Lost wages and reduced earning capacity, if your injuries keep you off work or force you to change careers.
- Pain and suffering, compensating for physical pain, sleep disruption, anxiety, and loss of enjoyment of daily activities.
- Scarring, disfigurement, and disability, particularly common when pedestrians suffer facial trauma or permanent mobility limitations.
- Property damage, such as broken phones, glasses, or other personal items.
Our attorneys do not rely solely on what the insurer is willing to acknowledge. Instead, we work with medical and economic experts to project future costs and present a damages model that matches the reality of your situation, not the adjuster’s spreadsheet. We know that a pedestrian accident settlement is a financial bridge that needs to carry you through surgeries, rehabilitation, lost income, and the long-term effects of trauma. We build claims with that reality in mind.
Deadlines and Insurance Issues in Colorado Pedestrian Claims
The statute of limitations for personal injury cases in Colorado generally gives injured people two years to file, with some motor-vehicle-related claims subject to a three-year limit. However, these rules can vary depending on factors such as government defendants, minor children, or delayed discovery of injuries.
Insurance adds another layer of complexity. Many pedestrian crashes involve uninsured or underinsured drivers who lack enough coverage to pay for serious injuries, as well as multiple policies in complex cases. We analyze each available policy and confirm whether any notice requirements apply. By addressing these questions early, we can prevent gaps in coverage and maximize the funds available to you.
Why Choose Boesen Law for an Aurora Pedestrian Accident Case
After a pedestrian accident, insurers may argue that a person on foot “came out of nowhere” or “was not in a crosswalk,” and without a strong investigation, those narratives may stick. Boesen spent decades challenging those assumptions and building evidence-backed cases that protect pedestrians’ rights. Your attorney will:
- Draw on a long record of handling complex motor vehicle and pedestrian collisions throughout Colorado.
- Understand the traffic patterns, problem intersections, and weather conditions that frequently contribute to crashes in Aurora.
- Use photography, scene inspections, and, where appropriate, expert reconstruction to show how limited sightlines, speeding, or distracted driving contributed to the collision.
- Prepare every case as if it could go to trial, which often leads to stronger settlement offers because insurers recognize that we are ready to prove your claim in court.
Talk to an Aurora Pedestrian Accident Lawyer at Boesen Law
A single missed deadline or poorly worded statement can limit your options, which is why getting experienced legal help early often makes a real difference in the outcome.
Boesen Law treats each pedestrian case as its own project, tailoring strategy to the specific intersection, roadway, and medical outcome instead of applying a one-size-fits-all approach. Contact us today to schedule a free case review with an experienced lawyer from our team—there are no fees unless we win your case.
Frequently Asked Questions About Aurora Pedestrian Accident Cases
Do I have a case if I was not in a marked crosswalk?
You might. Colorado law recognizes both marked and unmarked crosswalks at many intersections, and drivers still have a duty to exercise reasonable care to avoid hitting pedestrians.
What if the driver says they never saw me?
“Not seeing” a pedestrian is often a sign of inattention, speeding, or poor observation, not a legal excuse. We look at lighting, weather, headlight use, and any available video to assess whether a reasonably careful driver should have seen you in time to stop.
Can I recover compensation if I was partially at fault?
Yes, as long as your share of fault is less than 50%. Your compensation would be reduced in proportion to your percentage of fault, but you may still recover substantial damages. We work to ensure any fault assigned to you is fair and evidence-based, not inflated by the insurance company.
How long will my pedestrian accident case take?
The timeline depends on the severity of your injuries, how long it takes to understand your medical prognosis, and whether liability is disputed. Some claims resolve in negotiations within several months after you reach maximum medical improvement, while others may require litigation and take longer.
What should I bring to my initial consultation?
Bring any police reports, photos, contact information for witnesses, medical records or discharge papers, and your auto and health insurance cards. If you have correspondence from the driver’s insurer or your own carrier, those documents are helpful as well.
Reach out to our law firm for a no-cost, no-obligation consultation today. Call our personal injury lawyers in the state of Colorado at (303) 999-9999 or contact us online.
Content Reviewed By


