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Grant County, Arkansas

Grant County Personal Injury Lawyer

About 17,958 residents · County seat: Sheridan · Serving accident victims across Grant County and all of Arkansas.

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An accident in Grant County can upend your life in an instant. Whether it happened on one of the county's main highways, at work, or on someone else's property, you may be facing medical bills, lost income, and pressure from insurance companies to settle for less than your claim is worth. Injury Claim Team connects injured Grant County residents with experienced Arkansas personal injury attorneys who know the local courts and fight for full, fair compensation.

About Grant County

Grant County is home to roughly 17,958 residents and sits within Central Arkansas and the Little Rock metropolitan area, the busiest highway hub in the state. The local economy centers on timber and commuting, and the county is served by U.S. 167 and U.S. 270. The county seat — where the circuit court that handles most injury lawsuits is located — is Sheridan. For people across Grant County, a leading source of serious injuries is U.S. 167 traffic and logging-truck collisions.

Local insight: Grant County injury lawsuits are generally filed in the circuit court at Sheridan. The most significant regional hazard is U.S. 167 traffic and logging-truck collisions.

Personal Injury Claims We Handle in Grant County

Our network attorneys handle the full range of personal-injury matters for Grant County residents:

View all 21 practice areas →

Arkansas Injury Law That Affects Your Grant County Claim

Arkansas follows a modified comparative-fault rule (Ark. Code § 16-64-122). You can still recover compensation if you were partly to blame, with your award reduced by your percentage of fault — but if you are found 50% or more at fault, you recover nothing. Insurers exploit this rule constantly, which is why building strong evidence of the other party's fault is critical.

In most Arkansas injury cases you have three years from the date of the accident to file a lawsuit under Ark. Code § 16-56-105. Miss that deadline and your claim is almost always barred. The Arkansas Constitution (Article 5, § 32) bars caps on compensatory damages, so a serious, well-documented claim is not artificially limited. A 2025 change in state law (Act 28) does affect how medical expenses are valued, which makes experienced legal guidance even more important.

Cities & Towns We Serve in Grant County

Select your community below for local information, or call 973-566-5599 for a free review no matter where in Grant County you are.

Grant County Personal Injury FAQs

Nothing upfront. Network attorneys work on contingency — you pay no attorney fee unless they win compensation for you. The case review is always free.

Most Grant County personal-injury cases are handled through the county circuit court, with the courthouse in Sheridan. Your attorney handles the filing and procedure for you.

Generally three years from the date of injury in Arkansas (Ark. Code § 16-56-105), though medical-malpractice and government claims can be shorter. Acting early protects evidence.

We connect injured people across all of Grant County, including Sheridan, Tull, Leola.

Injured Anywhere in Grant County?

Free, confidential, no obligation. Find out what your claim may be worth today.

Call 973-566-5599 — Free Review