
Fort Bend County suburb of 75,000 with a diverse population and commuter arteries feeding into the Beltway and US-59. If you were injured in Missouri City, we handle the claim from start to finish — and we come to you.
Quick answer: If you were injured in Missouri City because of someone else's negligence — a driver, a property owner, an employer, a trucking company — you likely have a claim under Texas law. The deadline is generally two years from the date of injury. Call (713) 842-9442 for a free case review, or use our online form. We come to Missouri City.
Missouri City isn't a place where you can afford to hire whoever runs the most billboards. The highways, hospitals, and common crash patterns in the area matter to your case. Your medical records will come from Memorial Hermann Sugar Land. Your crash report will likely come from Missouri City Police Department or Texas DPS depending on where it happened. The specific stretch of road where the crash happened will influence how we reconstruct what happened and who's liable.
We handle Missouri City cases regularly. Here's what we know about the area:
US-90A through Missouri City carries significant commercial truck traffic. The Beltway 8 / Fort Bend Parkway interchange and SH-6 at FM 1092 are frequent crash locations.
Injured clients are typically transported to Memorial Hermann Sugar Land, HCA Houston Healthcare Southeast. We work with these facilities regularly, know how to get records released quickly, and know which imaging facilities and specialists they refer patients to for follow-up treatment. If you don't have health insurance, we can connect you with Missouri City-area providers who will treat you on a letter of protection.
US-90A, Beltway 8, SH-6, FM 2234 are the arteries that run through Missouri City. Most crashes we handle in the area happen on or near these routes, at major interchanges, or at high-volume intersections where feeder roads meet the freeways.
Under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code §16.003, most personal injury lawsuits must be filed within two years of the date of injury. If you miss this deadline, the claim is typically gone forever. Certain cases — especially those against government entities or public hospitals — have much shorter notice deadlines, sometimes as short as six months. Read our full statute of limitations guide.
Texas follows a modified comparative negligence rule. If you're partially at fault for your own injury, your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. If a jury finds you more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing. Insurance adjusters often try to push fault onto you to take advantage of this rule. How the 51% bar works →
Texas requires drivers to carry minimum liability limits of $30,000 per person / $60,000 per accident / $25,000 property damage (30/60/25). In catastrophic crashes, these minimums rarely cover the damages. We routinely stack coverage — UM/UIM policies, umbrella policies, employer policies for drivers on the job, and commercial policies where applicable.
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