Leander Truck Accident Lawyer: Holding 18-Wheeler Companies Accountable in Williamson County
Leander has transformed from a small Hill Country town into one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. With more than 80,000 residents and growing daily, the city anchors the northwest corridor of the Austin metro along US 183 and the US 183A toll road. That growth has brought new families, new jobs, and unfortunately, far more traffic on highways and surface streets that were never designed to carry it. McFarlane Law represents Leander truck accident victims throughout Williamson County — fighting for the full compensation Texas law allows for medical bills, lost income, pain and suffering, and long-term impairment.
Dangerous Roads, Intersections, and Sites in Leander
Commercial truck collisions in Leander concentrate on US 183 and US 183A, both of which carry significant 18-wheeler traffic between the Permian Basin, the Killeen-Temple corridor, and the Austin metro. The combination of heavy 18-wheeler traffic, frequent acceleration and deceleration around exits, and ongoing growth-driven construction makes these corridors uniquely dangerous for passenger vehicles. We frequently see rear-end underride wrecks, jackknife crashes, blind-spot side-swipes, and rollover wrecks tied to overweight or improperly secured loads.
Beyond the highest-risk corridors, Leander is served by US 183, the US 183A toll road, FM 1431 (Whitestone Blvd), Ronald Reagan Boulevard, and FM 2243. Cases also originate in residential neighborhoods, school zones served by Leander Independent School District, and the parking lots of major Leander-area employers including HEB, the Leander ISD school district, Costco Wholesale, and a fast-growing healthcare and professional services sector.
Common Causes of Leander Truck Accident Cases
After handling hundreds of truck accident matters across Central Texas, McFarlane Law sees the same root causes appear repeatedly in Leander cases:
- Driver fatigue and Hours-of-Service (HOS) violations
- Speeding by truck drivers under unrealistic delivery deadlines
- Distracted driving and onboard device use
- Improperly loaded, overloaded, or unsecured cargo
- Failure to inspect or maintain brakes, tires, and lights
- Inadequate training of newly licensed CDL drivers
- Pressure from motor carriers to skip mandated rest breaks
- Drug or alcohol impairment behind the wheel
Types of Injuries We Handle in Leander Truck Accident Cases
The most common injuries we represent in Leander truck accident cases include:
- Catastrophic head and brain injuries from underride or rollover crashes
- Spinal cord injuries causing paraplegia or quadriplegia
- Crush injuries and traumatic amputations
- Severe burn injuries from post-collision fuel fires
- Multiple complex fractures requiring surgical reconstruction
- Internal organ damage and life-threatening internal bleeding
- Permanent disability and lifelong impairment
- Wrongful death
Many of these injuries do not show their full extent in the first 24-72 hours. Get evaluated by a doctor — typically at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Round Rock or another local emergency facility — even if you feel fine immediately after the incident.
Damages in a Leander Truck Accident Case
Texas law allows Leander truck accident victims to recover several categories of damages, depending on the facts of the case:
- Past and future medical expenses
- Past and future lost wages and lost earning capacity
- Pain and suffering and mental anguish
- Permanent impairment, disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life
- Out-of-pocket expenses related to the injury
- Loss of consortium for spouses and family members
- Punitive (exemplary) damages where the at-fault party’s conduct was grossly negligent
- Wrongful death damages (Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 71)
How much your case is actually worth depends on the severity of your injuries, the strength of liability evidence, the available insurance coverage, and how aggressively your case is litigated. Texas does not impose a general cap on most personal injury damages, but specific caps apply to medical malpractice and certain governmental claims.
What to Do After a Leander Truck Accident
The steps you take in the first hours and days after a Leander truck accident have a major impact on your ability to recover full compensation. We recommend:
- Call 911 — for any 18-wheeler crash, request EMS even if you can walk
- Do NOT speak to the trucking company’s adjuster or accept any check
- Photograph DOT numbers on the cab and trailer, both license plates, and any visible damage
- Note the carrier name, motor carrier (MC) number, and any sub-hauler markings
- Get to the closest trauma center for evaluation — even “minor” symptoms can mask spinal damage
- Contact a truck accident lawyer immediately — federal preservation-of-evidence rules give carriers strong incentive to spoliate ELD logs and dashcam footage
Leander Local Resources
The following Leander and Williamson County resources are useful for victims and families dealing with the aftermath of a truck accident:
- Leander Police Department — for Leander crash reports and incident records
- Williamson County Sheriff — for incidents on county roads outside Leander city limits
- Baylor Scott & White Medical Center – Round Rock — the closest Level II trauma center; Cedar Park Regional Medical Center on US-183 also serves Leander emergency cases
- Williamson County Justice Center in Georgetown — where Williamson County civil cases are filed
- Texas DPS Crash Records — request your official crash report
- FMCSA SAFER Carrier Lookup — verify trucking company DOT and MC numbers
Related Leander Practice Areas
McFarlane Law represents Leander clients in a wide range of injury matters. Many truck accident cases also involve issues handled in our other practice pages:
- Leander Car Accident Lawyer
- Leander Motorcycle Accident Lawyer
- Leander Pedestrian Accident Lawyer
- Leander Bus Accident Lawyer
- Leander Personal Injury Lawyer (overview)
We also handle the broader practice of Truck accident cases statewide, and serve neighboring Cedar Park clients via our Cedar Park Truck Accident Lawyer page.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to file a Leander truck accident claim?
Under the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code, most truck accident claims must be filed within two years of the date of the incident. Some claims — including those against governmental entities, school districts, or the City of Leander — are subject to much shorter formal-notice deadlines that can be as short as 90 days. The earlier you involve a lawyer, the more options you preserve.
What if I was partly at fault for the Leander truck accident?
Texas follows a “modified comparative fault” rule (Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Chapter 33). As long as you are 50% or less at fault for the incident, you can still recover compensation — though your recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. McFarlane Law fights aggressively to push back against unfair fault allocations from insurance companies.
Do I have to pay anything to talk to a Leander truck accident lawyer?
No. We offer free, no-obligation consultations to every Leander truck accident victim. If you decide to hire McFarlane Law, we work on a contingency fee basis — you pay no attorney’s fees unless we recover compensation. We also advance the costs of case investigation, expert witnesses, and medical records.
Contact a Leander Truck Accident Lawyer Today
If you or a loved one was injured in a Leander truck accident, time matters. Evidence disappears, witnesses move, surveillance footage gets overwritten, and Texas’s two-year statute of limitations runs continuously. McFarlane Law founder Zach McFarlane personally reviews every Leander case that comes through our doors.
Call McFarlane Law at (512) 222-4900 or use our free consultation form. We’ve recovered more than $100 million for injury victims and their families across Texas. There is no fee unless we recover for you.