The Concord Car Accident Lawyers Drivers Trust
If you've been hurt in a car accident anywhere in Concord — on I-680 heading downtown, the merge from Highway 4 onto I-680, the Highway 242 corridor through Monument corridor, or a side-street collision in downtown Concord, Clayton Valley, or Monument corridor — you don't have time to figure out the legal system from scratch. The insurance company already has its team working against you. You need yours.
Scranton Law Firm has been representing injured drivers across California for more than 50 years. We've recovered over $1 billion for our clients. And we know Concord — its freeway bottlenecks, its hospital routes, its police and CHP reporting channels, and the way Contra Costa County personal injury cases actually get worked up and litigated. If you were hit in this city, we're the team you want on your side.
We answer the phone 24/7. The consultation is free. And if the insurance company is already calling you, good — they can call us instead.
Why Concord's Roads Are Among the East Bay's Most Dangerous
Concord is the third-busiest freeway hub in Northern California after the Bay Area and the Central Valley junctions. Five major routes converge here:
- I-680 — Concord’s main north-south freeway, carrying commuter traffic, freight, and fast lane-change activity through the heart of the region
- Autopista 4 — the major east-west commuter corridor linking Concord to Pittsburg, Antioch, Martinez, and the rest of central Contra Costa County
- Highway 242 — a short but high-volume connector where speed, merging, and freight traffic create recurring crash patterns
- Kirker Pass Road — a major east-county connector with sharp speed changes, commute congestion, and serious injury exposure
- Willow Pass Road and Clayton Road — major local arterials feeding the freeway system, shopping districts, and dense intersection traffic
Add in surface streets like Willow Pass Road, Port Chicago Highway, Monument Boulevard, Clayton Road, Concord Avenue, and Ygnacio Valley Road — and you have a city where almost every commute involves a high-risk interaction. California Office of Traffic Safety rankings and recent regional reporting have repeatedly placed Concord among the worst large California cities for fatal and injury crashes, which lines up with what drivers experience daily on the city’s freeway stack and major arterials.
Concord also has a very specific crash rhythm. Morning congestion builds at the freeway connectors, afternoon queue spillback hits the ramps and arterial approaches, and evening retail and event traffic turns already-busy intersections into lane-change and left-turn traps. That pattern matters because it affects how crashes happen, which witnesses are available, and what evidence we know to go after first.
The roads weren't built for the population they now carry. And that's before you account for tourist traffic to Tahoe on Highway 4, freight traffic on Highway 242, and the daily commute pressure on Kirker Pass Road and I-680.
High-Risk Concord Intersections and Roadways
Some of the most accident-prone locations in the city:
Freeway danger zones
I-680 × Highway 242 interchangeHighway 4 approaches near the I-680 interchangeKirker Pass Road at Clayton RoadWillow Pass Road near downtown Concord and Galindo StreetPort Chicago Highway and Bailey Road corridorsSurface street hot spots
Clayton Road near downtown Concord and Treat BoulevardMonument Boulevard through the Monument corridorWillow Pass Road × Galindo StreetYgnacio Valley Road × Oak Grove RoadPort Chicago Highway × Monument Boulevard / 23rd StreetIf your accident happened at any of these locations, we already know the typical patterns — sight-line problems, signal-timing issues, common mechanisms of collision — and how to investigate them.
Do I Need a Lawyer for My Concord Car Accident Case?
Short answer: if you were injured, almost always yes. Here's why.
Insurance companies — yours and the at-fault driver's — are not on your side. Their job is to pay as little as possible. Studies have shown that injured drivers represented by an attorney recover an average 3–4 times more than those who try to handle their claim alone, even after attorney's fees. A lawyer changes the math because:
- We know what your case is actually worth — including future medical care, lost earning capacity, and pain and suffering, not just your immediate ER bill
- We handle the insurance companies so you don't say something on a recorded call that gets used against you later
- We preserve evidence — surveillance footage, vehicle data recorders, witness statements — before it disappears
- We know the local Concord medical providers and can connect you with treatment whether or not you have health insurance
- We know the Contra Costa County Superior Court, including which departments hear PI cases and which judges take them seriously
You can talk to us for free. There's no fee unless we win your case.
Common Causes of Car Accidents in Concord
Most Concord car accidents fall into one of a handful of patterns. We see all of them every week:
La conducción distraída — phones, GPS units, infotainment screens. The single fastest-growing cause of serious accidents in California.
Drunk and drugged driving — Concord's nightlife in downtown Concord, the bar district along Willow Pass Road, and the entertainment corridor near Todos Santos Plaza generate consistent late-night DUI crashes. The 2 a.m. closing time on bar hours produces a predictable spike.
Speeding and aggressive driving — long stretches of Port Chicago Highway, Clayton Road, and Kirker Pass Road create the exact kind of fast-lane, late-braking behavior that leads to violent Concord crashes.
Reckless lane changes — heavy on Clayton Road, Ygnacio Valley Road, and the Kirker Pass Road / Willow Pass Road split. Drivers cutting across multiple lanes to make a freeway exit cause some of the worst injury accidents we see. In Concord, a lot of these are really queue-spillback crashes: a driver realizes too late that traffic is stacking at an interchange or signal and makes a panicked cross-lane move.
Rear-end collisions in stop-and-go traffic — peak danger times are 7–9 a.m. on the inbound commute and 3–6 p.m. outbound. The combination of brake-checking, distraction, and sudden congestion makes the morning and evening commutes Concord's most dangerous hours.
Failure to yield at intersections — particularly at the surface street hot spots above. Left turns across oncoming traffic, rushed turns out of shopping-center driveways, and rolling stops at busy local connectors are persistent problems.
Tahoe-bound traffic on Highway 4 — heavy snow weekends, holiday travel periods, and the interaction between high-speed freeway drivers and tourists unfamiliar with the road.
Commercial truck and big rig involvement — Highway 242 and I-680 carry significant freight volume. When a passenger car collides with an 80,000-pound rig, the injury patterns are catastrophic.
What to Do Right Now After a Concord Car Accident
If the accident just happened — or even if it was hours or days ago — here's the order of operations that protects your case:
- Get medical attention. John Muir Medical Center – Concord Campus is the closest ER for many Concord crashes, and John Muir Medical Center – Walnut Creek handles higher-acuity trauma cases. Go even if you feel fine — adrenaline masks injuries, and a same-day medical record is critical evidence.
- Call the police. Concord Police Department (or CHP if it happened on a freeway) will document the scene. Get the report number before you leave.
- Photograph everything. Vehicle damage, the scene, road conditions, license plates, the other driver's insurance card, any visible injuries.
- Get witness contact information. Names and phone numbers. Witnesses leave fast, and they're worth more than almost any other evidence.
- Don't talk to the other driver's insurance. Not even once. Don't give a recorded statement. Don't accept an early settlement offer. Tell them to call your lawyer.
- Don't post about the crash on social media. Insurance investigators will find it, and they will use it.
- Call us. 1-800-707-0707, 24/7. Free consultation.
Local Hospitals and Trauma Centers
We've worked with all of these facilities and can help you obtain records, schedule consultations, and arrange treatment on a lien basis if you don't have health insurance.
Concord Police, CHP, and Crash Reports
We pull these reports for our clients as part of intake — you don't have to deal with the bureaucracy yourself. More importantly, we know when a Concord case needs more than just the report: nearby business surveillance, intersection camera timing, witness canvassing, and vehicle data downloads before the evidence window closes.
How Contra Costa County Superior Court Handles Car Accident Cases
Personal injury lawsuits in Concord are filed at the Wakefield Taylor Courthouse at 725 Court Street, Martinez, CA 94553. Civil cases — including PI — are heard there.
A few things that matter for your case:
- Statute of limitations: California Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1 gives you two years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit. There are exceptions (claims against government entities have a 6-month presentation deadline), but two years is the rule for most car accident cases.
- Comparative negligence: California is a "pure comparative negligence" state. Even if you were partially at fault, you can still recover — your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. Insurance companies will try to push as much fault onto you as possible, which is one of the reasons having an attorney matters.
- Damages cap: California does not cap economic damages or non-economic damages in standard motor vehicle cases (unlike medical malpractice, which has separate rules). Your case can recover the full value of your losses.
What Compensation Is Available in a Concord Car Accident Case?
You may be entitled to recover:
Gastos médicos
Hospital bills, surgery, physical therapy, prescriptions, and future care — including in-home care and equipment.
Salarios perdidos
Income you've already missed plus reduced earning capacity if your injuries affect your ability to work going forward.
Daño a la propiedad
Vehicle repair or replacement, plus the diminished value of a repaired vehicle.
Pain & suffering
Physical pain, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life from the accident and its aftermath.
Los daños punitivos
In cases involving DUI, street racing, or other conduct that goes beyond ordinary negligence.
A real settlement isn't just last week's medical bill plus your insurance deductible. It accounts for everything the accident cost you — past, present, and future. We make sure nothing gets left on the table.
Why Choose Scranton Law Firm
Beyond the numbers: we represent Concord drivers regularly and know the local court system, hospitals, and accident patterns. In-person Concord consultations are available by appointment — you talk to a real attorney, not just a phone screener. We also know where smaller firms leave money on the table: future-care proof, uninsured-motorist angles, commercial-defendant identification, and evidence that disappears before a generic PI intake team even asks for it. You don't pay us anything unless we recover for you. We front the costs of investigation, expert witnesses, and litigation. If we don't win, you don't owe.
Concord Car Accident Risk Snapshot
California OTS rankings and local safety reporting paint a pretty clear picture: Concord is consistently one of the rougher big-city driving environments in the state, especially where the freeway system dumps into busy commercial arterials.
- Concord repeatedly shows up near the top tier of large California cities for fatal and injury crashes
- Crash volume spikes during weekday commute windows, especially the late-afternoon outbound rush
- Friday and Saturday remain heavy collision days because commute traffic blends with nightlife and event traffic
- I-680, Highway 4, Highway 242, and the downtown connector create the highest-speed fatal exposure in the city
- Distraction, unsafe lane changes, DUI, and failure to yield are the recurring themes in serious Concord injury cases
How a Concord Car Accident Claim Works (Our Process)
Consulta gratuita
You call us. We listen. No fee, no commitment. We tell you honestly whether you have a case worth pursuing.
Investigación
We pull the police report, gather medical records, identify witnesses, secure surveillance footage, and reconstruct the accident if needed.
Treatment coordination
We make sure you're getting the medical care you need — and we handle the lien arrangements if you don't have health insurance.
Demand & negotiation
Once you've reached maximum medical improvement, we send a demand to the insurance company and negotiate hard.
Litigation if needed
If the insurer won't pay what your case is worth, we file suit. Most cases still settle, but trial-readiness is what produces serious offers.
Recovery
Settlement or verdict. We resolve outstanding medical liens, deduct fees and case costs, and put your check in your hand.
Preguntas Frecuentes
How long do I have to file a car accident claim in Concord? Two years from the date of the accident under California's general personal injury statute of limitations. Claims against government entities (city, county, state) require a written claim within six months. Don't wait — call us as soon as possible to make sure no deadline gets missed.
How much does it cost to hire a Concord car accident lawyer? Nothing up front. We work on contingency — our fee comes out of the settlement or verdict, only if we win. You pay nothing if we don't recover for you.
The other driver's insurance is offering me a settlement. Should I take it? Almost never, not before you talk to a lawyer. Early offers are designed to close out your claim before you understand your full injuries or the long-term costs. Once you sign a release, the case is over. Call us first.
What if the accident was partly my fault? You can still recover. California uses pure comparative negligence — even if you were 50% or more at fault, you can collect a reduced award. Don't assume you have no case.
What if the at-fault driver was uninsured or fled the scene? You may still have coverage through your own uninsured motorist (UM) or underinsured motorist (UIM) policy. We pursue these claims regularly. Hit-and-run cases are also recoverable through UM coverage in many California policies.
What if I was a passenger in the car? You almost certainly have a claim — passengers are rarely at fault. You can claim against the driver of the car you were in, the other driver, or both, depending on liability.
What if I was hurt in a rideshare (Uber/Lyft) accident? Rideshare accidents involve special insurance rules — Uber and Lyft carry $1 million liability policies during active rides. We handle rideshare cases regularly.
How long will my case take? It varies. Straightforward cases with clear liability and quickly-resolved injuries can settle in months. Cases involving disputed liability, serious injuries, or litigation can take 1–2+ years. We'll give you an honest timeline at intake.
Do I have to go to court? Probably not. The vast majority of car accident cases settle without trial. But if your case requires it, we will take it all the way.
What's my case worth? Depends entirely on the facts — your medical costs, lost income, severity of injuries, available insurance coverage, and percentage of fault. Free consultation, free valuation. Call us.
Will my insurance rates go up if I file a claim? Generally not if the accident wasn't your fault. California has rules limiting insurer surcharges for not-at-fault accidents. Your lawyer can advise on the specifics of your policy.
What if my injuries didn't show up until days later? This is extremely common — soft tissue injuries, concussions, and back/neck injuries often surface 24–72 hours after the crash. Document them as soon as they appear. They are still compensable. Don't let an insurance adjuster tell you otherwise.
Why should I hire Scranton Law instead of another Concord firm? Because car accident cases are won in the details, not in the slogan. We know how Concord crashes actually happen, what evidence disappears first, how to deal with Contra Costa law enforcement and records channels, and how to build a case that reflects the real long-term value of your injuries — not just the adjuster's first lowball number. We're not a national lead-generation site — we're a real California PI firm with attorneys who try cases.
How fast can I talk to a lawyer? Right now. Call 1-800-707-0707, 24/7. You can also book a free case review online or use our case quiz.
Local Legal & Government Resources
- Contra Costa County Superior Court — Wakefield Taylor Courthouse, 725 Court Street, Martinez, CA 94553
- California DMV — Concord offices — for vehicle accident report requirements (SR-1 form)
- Oficina de Seguridad en el Tráfico de California — ots.ca.gov
- Concord Police Department — cityofconcord.org/police
- CHP del Área de Contra Costa — chp.ca.gov
Recursos relacionados
Cómo obtener un informe de accidente del CHP
Step-by-step guide for I-680, Highway 4, Kirker Pass Road, and Highway 242 crash reports. Read the guide →
Abogado de Muerte Injusta en Concord
Lost a loved one in a Concord crash? $1B+ recovered, free consultation. Learn more →
Abogado de Accidentes de Motocicleta en Concord
Hit on I-680, Highway 4, or Highway 242 on a bike? Specialist motorcycle representation. Learn more →
Abogado de accidentes automovilísticos en California
Statewide car accident representation across California. Learn more →
Don't Let the Insurance Company Decide What Your Case Is Worth.
The insurance company is not going to tell you what your case is actually worth. They will tell you what they hope you'll accept. Those are two very different numbers.
Call Scranton Law Firm today. Free consultation. No fee unless we win.
📞 1-800-707-0707 — answered 24/7