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South Carolina car accident help

South Carolina Auto Accident Attorneys

A crash on a South Carolina road can change everything in seconds. autoaccident.co helps people injured anywhere in South Carolina get matched with a local auto accident attorney for a free, no-obligation review.

  • Free, confidential review
  • Available 24/7
  • No fee unless you win

A crash on a South Carolina road can change everything in seconds. autoaccident.co helps people injured anywhere in South Carolina get matched with a local auto accident attorney for a free, no-obligation review. The review is free, there is no obligation, and participating attorneys typically work on a contingency basis, which generally means no attorney fee unless they recover compensation for you.

Car Accident Facts for South Carolina

Filing deadline (general)
About 3 years
Insurance system
At-fault (tort)
Fault rule
Comparative negligence
Capital
Columbia

General reference only, not legal advice. Laws change and exceptions apply. Confirm with an attorney.

Filing Deadlines in South Carolina

Every state limits how long you have to bring a claim, and South Carolina is no exception. As a general reference, the personal-injury filing deadline runs about 3 years from the date of the crash. The window can be shorter when a claim involves a city, county, or state vehicle, and special rules can apply to minors and to wrongful death. Because missing the deadline can permanently end a claim, it is worth confirming the exact date that applies to you early.

Who Pays After a South Carolina Crash

South Carolina is an at-fault state, which generally means the driver who caused the crash, through their insurer, is responsible for the harm they caused. On top of that, South Carolina follows a modified comparative negligence rule (51 percent bar), so you can recover as long as you are not more at fault than the other party. These rules decide how much you can recover and from whom, and they are exactly the kind of thing an attorney sorts out so an insurer cannot use them against you.

Where Crashes Happen in South Carolina

Heavy traffic corridors tend to produce the most serious collisions. In South Carolina, that includes routes such as I-26, I-95, I-85, I-20, along with dense city streets and intersections in the metros below. High-speed interstate crashes, multi-vehicle pileups, and rideshare and commercial-truck collisions often involve more significant injuries and more than one insurer, which is where experienced representation matters most.

South Carolina Cities and Towns We Cover

Do not see your town? We connect injured drivers across all of South Carolina. Start a free review and we will match you with an attorney who serves your area.

What a South Carolina Claim May Help You Recover

  • Medical bills, from emergency care through rehabilitation and future treatment.
  • Lost wages and reduced earning ability while you recover.
  • Vehicle and property damage.
  • Pain, suffering, and the effect of the injury on your daily life.

Every case is different and no outcome is promised. These are common categories of damages, not a prediction about your case.

Maintained by the autoaccident.co editorial team. Last reviewed June 2026. This page is general information, not legal advice, and state laws change. How we keep this current.

Talk to a South Carolina Auto Accident Attorney

Free review, no obligation, available 24/7.

Call (617) 444-7777

South Carolina Car Accident Questions

As a general reference, South Carolina sets a personal-injury filing deadline of about 3 years. Deadlines can be shorter for claims against a government entity and there are exceptions, so confirm your exact deadline with an attorney as soon as possible.

South Carolina is an at-fault (tort) state, which generally means the driver responsible for the crash, and their insurer, is liable for the damages they cause.

South Carolina follows a modified comparative negligence rule (51 percent bar), so you can recover as long as you are not more at fault than the other party. An attorney can review the facts of your crash and explain how the rule applies to your claim.

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