Hutto Personal Injury Lawyers: Protecting Families Across Williamson County
Hutto, Texas has gone from a small farming community to one of the fastest-growing cities in Williamson County in just over two decades. With roughly 40,000 residents and daily population gains driven by the Samsung Austin Semiconductor expansion in neighboring Taylor, Hutto sits at the intersection of US 79, the SH 130 toll road, and a network of FM roads that now carry far more traffic than they were designed for.
McFarlane Law represents injured Hutto residents in every category of personal injury — from car wrecks and 18-wheeler crashes on US 79, to construction-site catastrophes on the city’s growing skyline, to wrongful death cases that change families forever. We’ve recovered more than $100 million for injury victims across Texas, and we handle every Hutto case on a contingency basis: you pay nothing unless we recover for you.
Why Hutto Families Choose McFarlane Law
Hutto families turn to McFarlane Law for several reasons:
- Trial-ready preparation. We prepare every case as if it will be tried in front of a Williamson County jury — which is what gets insurance carriers to pay full value at the negotiating table.
- Local familiarity. We know Hutto-area roads, the dangerous corridors on US 79, the Williamson County courts where civil cases are filed, and the medical providers our clients see.
- $100M+ recovered. McFarlane Law’s track record across Texas personal injury, oilfield, maritime, and trucking cases speaks for itself.
- Direct access to the lawyer. Hutto clients work directly with founder Zach McFarlane, not a rotating cast of paralegals.
- No fee unless we win. Every Hutto case is handled on contingency. You pay nothing up front and nothing unless we recover compensation.
Hutto Personal Injury Cases We Handle
Click any of the following practice areas for an in-depth Hutto-specific guide:
- Hutto Car Accident Lawyer — car accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Truck Accident Lawyer — truck accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Motorcycle Accident Lawyer — motorcycle accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Pedestrian Accident Lawyer — pedestrian accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Bus Accident Lawyer — bus accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Drunk Driving Accident Lawyer — drunk driving accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Hit and Run Accident Lawyer — hit and run accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Construction Accident Lawyer — construction accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Uber & Lyft Accident Lawyer — uber & lyft accident cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
- Hutto Work Injury Lawyer — work injury cases on Hutto highways and surface streets
The Hutto Highway and Road Network
Hutto is served by US 79, the SH 130 toll road, FM 685, FM 1660, and FM 3349. The highest-risk corridors for serious injury crashes include the US 79 / SH 130 interchange at Hutto, US 79 between Hutto and Round Rock, FM 685 through Co-Op City, and the FM 1660 / FM 3349 corridors that connect Hutto to Taylor and the new Samsung Austin Semiconductor expansion. limited public transit; most Hutto residents commute by car along US 79 and SH 130 adds another layer of complexity, as do the constant construction projects related to hutto sits at the epicenter of one of the largest construction projects in texas history — the multi-billion-dollar samsung austin semiconductor fab in adjacent taylor — alongside a continuous stream of new subdivisions, schools, and warehouse projects.
Hutto workers face their own risks. Williamson County’s economy runs on semiconductor manufacturing, warehousing and distribution, residential construction tied to Samsung-driven population growth, and infrastructure work along SH 130 and US 79, and the volume of major employers — including Samsung Austin Semiconductor (whose massive Taylor expansion sits just east of Hutto), Hutto ISD, Co-Op Distribution Center, and a rapidly expanding industrial logistics sector — produces a steady flow of work-related injury cases. We handle those under both the Texas Workers’ Compensation Act and (more often) under non-subscriber and third-party liability frameworks.
Hutto & Williamson County Resources
The following resources are useful for Hutto residents and families:
- City of Hutto — official city website
- Hutto Police Department — non-emergency line and crash report requests
- Williamson County Sheriff — for incidents on county roads
- Williamson County Justice Center in Georgetown — civil court information for Williamson County
- Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Round Rock — the closest Level II trauma center; AdventHealth Round Rock also receives Hutto-area emergency transports
- Hutto Independent School District — home to the Hutto Hippos and a district that has more than tripled in size over the past two decades to keep pace with the city’s explosive growth
- TxDOT Austin District — state highway construction and traffic information
- Texas DPS Crash Records — request your official crash report
Texas Personal Injury Deadlines That Affect Hutto Residents
Texas’s general personal injury statute of limitations is two years from the date of the injury (Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code §16.003). Wrongful death claims are also subject to a two-year deadline. But several types of cases involve far shorter notice periods:
- Claims against the City of Hutto, Williamson County, or any Texas governmental entity require formal written notice — sometimes as short as 90 days under the Texas Tort Claims Act
- Claims involving Hutto Independent School District school district vehicles or premises typically require notice within 90 days
- Federal Tort Claims Act claims (against U.S. government vehicles, postal trucks, etc.) require notice within two years but follow a different procedural track
- Workers’ compensation claims must be reported to the employer within 30 days and filed with the Texas Department of Insurance within one year
If you’ve been injured in Hutto, do not wait. Even if your case is well within the two-year general window, evidence (surveillance footage, witness memory, vehicle damage) deteriorates rapidly. Get a free case evaluation from McFarlane Law today.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a Hutto personal injury lawyer if my case is “small”?
Insurance companies routinely offer Hutto accident victims a fraction of what their cases are actually worth. Even moderate-impact crashes can produce injuries — like herniated discs or post-concussion syndrome — that don’t fully appear for weeks. A Hutto personal injury lawyer can evaluate your case for free, explain what your claim is worth under Texas law, and protect you from quick lowball settlement offers that close out future medical needs.
How long do I have to file a personal injury claim in Hutto?
Under the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 16, most personal injury claims must be filed within two years of the date of injury. Wrongful death claims are also subject to a two-year deadline. Claims against governmental entities (like Williamson County, Hutto, or a school district) require formal notice — sometimes within as few as 90 days — long before the two-year statute runs.
What does it cost to hire McFarlane Law for a Hutto injury case?
Nothing up front. We handle Hutto personal injury cases on a contingency fee basis — you pay no attorney’s fees unless we recover compensation for you. Initial consultations are always free, and we cover case expenses (medical record retrieval, expert witnesses, accident reconstruction) on the front end.
Contact a Hutto Personal Injury Lawyer Today
McFarlane Law represents Hutto, Williamson County, and Central Texas injury victims on a contingency-fee basis — no fee unless we recover. Zach McFarlane personally reviews every Hutto case that comes through our doors.
Call us at (512) 222-4900 or fill out our free, no-obligation consultation form to get started. The insurance company already has lawyers working against you — it’s time to even the playing field.