A Philadelphia personal injury lawyer investigates your accident, proves who was at fault, handles all communication with insurance companies, and fights to recover compensation for your medical bills, lost wages, and pain and suffering under Pennsylvania law.
Their entire role is to protect your rights while you focus on recovering.
Here is what a personal injury attorney in Philadelphia specifically handles on your behalf:
The first three days after you hire us are the most critical. Surveillance footage gets overwritten, vehicle data gets erased, and witnesses forget details. We act immediately to lock down evidence before it disappears.
On day one, we send a spoliation letter to the at-fault party. A spoliation letter is a formal legal notice that demands all relevant evidence — including video footage, vehicle black box data, and internal records — be preserved. We also notify all insurance companies that you are now represented by our firm, which means adjusters must stop contacting you directly.
At the same time, we help you open a claim for Pennsylvania Personal Injury Protection (PIP) benefits. PIP is a type of auto insurance coverage that pays your initial medical bills regardless of who was at fault, so treatment can begin without delay.
Once your medical treatment is underway, we begin building the full picture of your losses. After you complete your primary treatment, we compile a demand package — a comprehensive written document sent to the insurance company that lays out the evidence of fault and the full extent of your damages.
A demand package typically includes:
After the insurer reviews the demand package, they will either make a settlement offer or dispute the claim. If the offer is fair, we advise you to accept it. If it is not, our legal team at Wilk Law Personal Injury & Car Accident Lawyers files a lawsuit and move into the litigation phase.
Litigation involves formal discovery — the exchange of evidence between both sides — as well as depositions, which are sworn out-of-court statements from witnesses and parties involved. Most cases settle before reaching trial, but our willingness to go all the way is exactly what forces insurance companies to negotiate seriously.
Pennsylvania has specific laws that directly impact how much compensation you can recover. Knowing these rules before you file a claim can be the difference between a full recovery and walking away with nothing.
When you purchased your auto insurance in Pennsylvania, you chose between Limited Tort and Full Tort coverage. This choice matters enormously if you are injured in a car accident.
Many people do not realize they chose Limited Tort until after an accident. We review your policy immediately and identify whether any exceptions apply that could restore your full rights to compensation.
Pennsylvania follows a modified comparative negligence rule. You can still recover compensation even if you were partially at fault, as long as your share of fault is 50 percent or less. Your total award is simply reduced by your percentage of fault.
For example, if a jury finds you partially at fault, your award will be reduced to reflect your share of responsibility. If a jury finds you more at fault than the other party, you may be unable to recover damages. Insurance companies know this rule well and will try to shift as much blame onto you as possible to reduce or eliminate their payout.
Under Pennsylvania law, you generally have two years from the date of your injury to file a personal injury lawsuit under Pennsylvania’s Two-Year Statute of Limitations. Miss that deadline and you permanently lose your right to seek compensation, regardless of how strong your case is.
There is an important exception: claims against government entities — such as the City of Philadelphia or SEPTA — require formal written notice within six months of the incident. Waiting too long is one of the most common and costly mistakes injured people make.
At Wilk Law, we handle personal injury cases exclusively. Every client we represent has been hurt by someone else’s negligence, and every case we take is handled with the same level of attention and commitment.
We represent clients injured in:
The purpose of a personal injury claim is to make you financially whole after someone else’s negligence turned your life upside down. We pursue two categories of damages on your behalf.
Economic damages are the measurable financial losses you have suffered:
Non-economic damages cover the personal toll your injuries have taken:
In cases involving extreme recklessness — such as a drunk driver or a company that knowingly ignored safety risks — we may also pursue punitive damages, which are designed to punish the wrongdoer beyond the scope of your actual losses.
We handle all personal injury cases on a contingency fee basis. A contingency fee means you pay nothing unless we win. Our fee is a percentage of the compensation we recover for you — there is no upfront cost and no bill if we do not succeed.
We also advance all case expenses, including court filing fees, expert witness costs, and the cost of obtaining medical records. You never have to pay out of pocket to pursue your claim. Our interests are completely aligned with yours: we only get paid when you do.
The steps you take immediately after an accident can make or break your case. Insurance companies are looking for any reason to reduce or deny what they owe you.
Led by attorney Tyler Wilk, our firm represents injured people exclusively — no corporate defense work, no insurance companies. We serve clients throughout Philadelphia and surrounding communities including West Chester, Reading, Coatesville, and Pottstown.
If you have been hurt due to someone else’s negligence, contact us today for a free consultation. You pay nothing unless we win your case.
Yes — you are not obligated to accept the first offer, and initial offers are almost always lower than the full value of your claim. Contact us before signing anything, because accepting a settlement typically waives your right to seek additional compensation later.
Yes, Pennsylvania’s 51 percent comparative negligence rule allows you to recover damages as long as you are 50 percent or less at fault. Your compensation will be reduced by your share of fault, but you are not barred from recovering.
Cases that settle without litigation often resolve within several months after treatment is complete, while cases requiring a lawsuit can take a year or longer. We move with urgency at every stage without sacrificing the full value of your claim.
Most cases settle before trial, but we prepare every case as if it will go before a jury. That preparation is what compels insurance companies to make fair settlement offers rather than risk a larger verdict in court.