Arkansas's comparative-fault rule is easier to understand through examples. Here's how shared blame affects recovery in practice.
Scenario: Partial Fault
Imagine you're rear-ended but had a brake light out. A jury might assign you 15% fault. If your damages are $50,000, you'd recover $42,500 — your award reduced by your share. You still recover, just less.
Most partial-fault cases work this way.
Scenario: Crossing the Bar
Now imagine an intersection crash where evidence suggests you were half responsible. At 50% fault, Arkansas's bar rule means you recover nothing. The difference between 49% and 50% is total.
This is why insurers fight to push your share upward.
The Takeaway
Because every percentage point matters — and the 50% line is decisive — building strong evidence that minimizes your fault is essential. Don't assume partial fault ends your claim; the exact percentages are often very much in dispute.
Injured in Arkansas? Injury Claim Team connects injured Arkansans with experienced personal injury attorneys across all 75 counties. A free, confidential case review costs nothing, and you pay no fee unless you win. Call 973-566-5599 24/7.
This article is general information about Arkansas law, not legal advice for your specific situation. For advice about your claim, request a free case review.
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