Bus Accident Lawyer in Denver, CO
Lionheart Injury Law holds bus companies to the highest duty of care and recovers maximum compensation after a bus accident in Denver.
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What Can You Recover After a Denver Bus Crash?
The average bus accident case we take settles for $200,000 to $3 million, and the catastrophic ones go seven to eight figures. Common carriers owe passengers the highest duty of care Colorado law knows, and juries hold them to it.
We prepare every case for trial from day one, and insurers know it. That is why our settlements come in bigger and faster. And so far, we are undefeated.
With us, you speak directly with your attorney, and our RN Medical Director manages your medical care from day one, insurance or no insurance. There's no fee unless we win. Contact us now for a free consultation.
Buses Are Common Carriers, and That Matters
A bus line is a common carrier, which under Colorado law owes its passengers the highest degree of care consistent with practical operation, a standard well above ordinary negligence. That heightened duty applies to RTD, school districts, charter and tour companies, airport and hotel shuttles, and intercity lines. It means the carrier answers for lapses a private driver might not, and it shapes how we build the case.
If you were hurt on an RTD bus or light rail, the 182-day notice clock is already running. Do not wait for the general three-year deadline; call us immediately so the notice is filed in time.
What Kinds of Bus Cases We Handle
- RTD buses and light rail, public transit, which brings the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act and its 182-day notice requirement (C.R.S. § 24-10-109).
- School buses, with a district's heightened duty to the children it carries.
- Charter, tour, and private shuttle buses, often interstate carriers subject to the same federal safety rules that govern truck cases.
- Intercity lines (such as Greyhound), federally regulated motor carriers with higher insurance. See our Greyhound accident guide.
- Crashes where a bus hits another vehicle, a cyclist, or a pedestrian.
How Bus Accidents Happen
The same failures recur: driver negligence, fatigue, and distraction; inadequate training and unsafe hiring; poor maintenance of brakes, tires, and doors; sudden stops and starts that throw standing riders; failure to secure wheelchairs; overcrowding; and dangerous routes and stops. Many involve a driver who was overworked or undertrained, and the records prove it.
Common Bus Accident Injuries
We build each claim around the specific injury and the specialists who treat it. Because passengers are unrestrained, even a low-speed event causes head and brain injuries, neck and spinal injuries, fractures, and thrown-passenger trauma. A collision with a bus's mass causes catastrophic harm to people in cars, on bikes, or on foot, and the worst crashes end in wrongful death.
Who Can Be Held Liable for a Bus Accident?
Often more than one party: the driver; the transit agency or bus company under respondeat superior and for negligent hiring, training, and maintenance; a government entity (RTD, a school district, CDOT) subject to the CGIA; a maintenance contractor; another at-fault motorist; and a manufacturer of a defective bus or component.
How We Build a Bus Accident Case
We send preservation letters immediately for the bus's onboard cameras, event-data recorder, and maintenance and driver records, and for a public agency, we calendar the 182-day notice at once so the claim is not lost. We pull the driver's history and the carrier's safety record, secure witness accounts, and bring in reconstruction and safety experts.
What Types of Damages Are Available?
Economic Damages
Past and future medical care, lost wages, lost earning capacity, and out-of-pocket costs, uncapped.
Non-Economic Damages
Pain and suffering, disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life. Under HB24-1472, the general non-economic cap is $1.5 million (2025), holding through 2027. Note that damages against a public entity like RTD are also subject to the CGIA's own liability limits.
How Colorado Courts Evaluate Pain and Suffering
There is no formula in the statute. Lawyers and adjusters lean on two recognized working methods.
The Multiplier Method
Economic damages times a severity-scaled figure.
The Per Diem Method
A daily value across the days affected, whichever drives the larger fully supported number.
Exemplary (Punitive) Damages
For willful and wanton conduct, a knowingly fatigued driver, ignored maintenance, Colorado allows exemplary damages under C.R.S. § 13-21-102 (subject to limits against public entities).
Wrongful Death Damages
When a bus crash kills, Colorado's wrongful death cap rose to $2,125,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, with economic losses uncapped. See our wrongful death guide.
Medical Liens and Subrogation
We negotiate health-insurance and provider liens so more reaches you.
How Much Is My Bus Accident Case Worth?
Value runs on the severity and permanence of the injury, whether a public-entity cap applies, the carrier's insurance (often substantial for private lines), and the strength of the liability proof under the heightened common-carrier standard. We assess it against real Colorado outcomes.
How Colorado's Comparative Negligence Rule Affects Your Claim
Under C.R.S. § 13-21-111 (the 50% bar), recovery drops by your share of fault. Carriers shift blame to other drivers or to the passenger; we answer with the video and the data, and the carrier may designate a non-party at fault under § 13-21-111.5.
Should I Accept the First Offer?
No; it is an anchor, and with public agencies the early offer often banks on you missing the 182-day notice. We protect the deadline and do not engage on a number until the case is built.
How Long Do I Have to File a Bus Accident Claim in Colorado?
Generally three years for a motor-vehicle bus crash (C.R.S. § 13-80-101), but if a government entity (RTD, a school district) is involved, a written notice of claim is due within 182 days under the CGIA (§ 24-10-109), miss it and the claim is barred. Wrongful death is two years. This short notice window is why bus cases cannot wait.
When Should I Hire a Lawyer?
Immediately, especially against a public agency. The 182-day clock starts at the crash, and onboard video overwrites in days. Early action protects both.
Will My Case Go to Trial?
Most bus cases settle, but the ones built for trial settle best. Venue is Denver District Court or the county where the crash occurred. If trial is what it takes, we are ready.
Talk to a Denver Bus Accident Lawyer
If a bus crash hurt you or someone you love, the notice deadlines make fast action essential. Free consultation, no fee unless we win.
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