San Francisco Broken bone injury Lawyer Help
LAST REVIEWED JULY 4, 2026 · CALIFORNIA
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Direct answer
Can I make a claim for a broken bone from an accident?
If you broke a bone in a California accident that someone else may have caused, you may be able to pursue a personal injury claim. Fractures are usually well documented by imaging, but the full claim often includes surgery, casting, therapy, missed work, and the time it takes to get back to normal activities. A free consultation with an attorney can help you understand your options, and California legal deadlines can be short and are strict.
Broken bones range from simple fractures that heal in a cast to complex breaks that require surgery, plates, screws, or rods. Common accident fractures involve the wrist, arm, collarbone, ribs, hip, leg, and ankle. Treatment and recovery time vary widely depending on the bone involved, the type of break, and your overall health, which is why evaluation by qualified medical professionals matters.
Some fractures are obvious at the scene, but others are not. Hairline and stress fractures, small breaks in the hands or feet, and rib fractures can be mistaken for sprains or bruising at first, with the true injury showing up on later imaging. If pain, swelling, or limited movement persists after an accident, consider being evaluated so the injury is properly identified.
The impact of a fracture often goes beyond the break itself. Weeks in a cast or brace, time on crutches, physical therapy, and restrictions on driving, lifting, or working can disrupt income and family routines. Documenting that whole recovery period helps give an accurate picture of what the injury actually cost you.
Why documentation and treatment matter
- Imaging and treatment records tie the fracture to the accident and show how serious the break was.
- Follow-up visits and therapy records document how the healing progressed and whether complications developed, while missed appointments can make the record look incomplete.
- Records of hardware, surgeries, and future procedures help capture the full course of care, not just the initial emergency visit.
- Notes on missed work, activity restrictions, and help you needed at home show how the injury affected your life during recovery.
Common accident causes
- Car and truck collisions, including side-impact crashes
- Motorcycle accidents, where riders often absorb the impact directly
- Bicycle accidents involving vehicles or road hazards
- Pedestrian accidents in crosswalks and parking lots
- Slip and fall or trip and fall accidents, especially involving wrists and hips
- Falls from ladders or scaffolding on construction sites
- Dog attacks that knock a person to the ground
Questions an attorney may ask
- Which bone or bones were broken, and what did the imaging show?
- Did the fracture require surgery, hardware, or a cast, and is more treatment expected?
- How long have you been out of work or on restricted duty?
- What daily activities have been difficult or impossible during your recovery?
- Have you had any complications, such as slow healing or ongoing pain and stiffness?
- How did the accident happen, and was a report made at the scene?
- Have you talked with any insurance company or accepted any payment related to the accident?
Evidence and medical-record checklist
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Check off what exists. Attorneys can request records you do not have copies of.
Local context: San Francisco, San Francisco County
- US-101 and the I-80 Bay Bridge approach funnel heavy traffic into and out of the city, and congestion around these corridors is a frequent setting for collisions.
- San Francisco has some of the densest pedestrian traffic in California, in downtown, in tourist areas, and around transit stops, so pedestrian collisions are a significant local concern.
- Buses and light rail share the streets with cars and bikes, and a collision involving a public transit vehicle can follow different claim procedures than one involving a private driver, sometimes with shorter timelines.
- Steep hills, fog, and busy bike corridors add local conditions that often come up when people describe how their San Francisco accident happened.
- Rideshare density is high throughout the city, and rideshare collisions can raise questions about which insurance policy was in effect during the trip.
Common questions
The break healed. Do I still have a claim?
Possibly. A claim can account for what the injury put you through, including medical bills, missed work, and the weeks or months of limitation during healing, even if you have now recovered. Some fractures also leave lingering stiffness or hardware in place. An attorney can review your records and explain what your situation may support.
What if my fracture was not diagnosed until days after the accident?
That happens more often than people expect, especially with hairline fractures or breaks in the hands, feet, and ribs. What helps is that you sought care once symptoms persisted and that the records document the injury and its likely cause. An attorney can explain how a delayed diagnosis fits into your claim.
Who pays my medical bills while my broken bone claim is pending?
In the near term, bills are often handled through your own health insurance, medical payments coverage on an auto policy, or arrangements with providers, depending on your situation. A claim against the at-fault party is usually resolved later. An attorney can explain the common ways treatment gets paid for while a claim is open.
My child broke a bone in an accident. Is the process different?
Claims involving injured children have some special rules in California, including court oversight of certain settlements and different deadline considerations. Growth plate injuries can also need longer monitoring. Consider speaking with an attorney who can explain how claims on behalf of a minor work.