Most people asking this aren’t looking for a law school lecture. They want to know what they’re actually in for before they decide whether to file. So here’s a straight answer.
Florida car accident lawsuits take anywhere from a few months to several years. That’s not a dodge. It reflects a real split between cases that settle early and cases that go all the way to trial.
Most car accident cases settle. When they do, the process typically runs six to eighteen months from the time you hire an attorney to the time a check clears. Cases that go to trial can run two to four years, sometimes longer.
What drives that difference? A few things worth knowing.
Florida’s Statute of Limitations
This matters before anything else: you have two years from the date of your accident to file a lawsuit in Florida. That deadline was cut from four years to two in 2023 under HB 837. Miss it, and your right to sue disappears.
Two years sounds like plenty of time. It usually isn’t, once you account for how long it takes to finish medical treatment, gather evidence, and go back and forth with an insurance company. If you’re in “wait and see” mode, you’re burning through that window right now.
What Actually Happens Between the Accident and Resolution
Medical treatment and documentation
Nothing moves until your injuries are documented. Attorneys almost always wait until you’ve reached maximum medical improvement before putting a value on your case. That’s the point where your doctors can say your condition has stabilized and estimate what future care will cost. Settling before that happens means leaving money on the table.
Depending on how serious your injuries are, this phase takes weeks to many months.
Investigation and demand
Once treatment is complete or stable, your attorney gathers what’s needed: police reports, medical records, witness statements, accident reconstruction if the facts are disputed. From there, a demand letter goes to the insurance company laying out your damages and what you’re asking for.
Florida law gives insurers 30 days to respond. Most come back low. Negotiation follows.
This phase typically takes one to three months, longer if you’re dealing with a carrier that drags its feet.
Filing the lawsuit
If negotiation stalls, your attorney files suit. Filing doesn’t send the case to trial. It signals you’re serious and opens the door to formal legal proceedings.
From filing, Florida courts schedule the case out. You’re typically looking at twelve to eighteen months from filing to a trial date, though most cases settle somewhere in that window.
Discovery
Both sides exchange evidence. Depositions happen. Experts get retained. This is the most time-consuming phase, and it’s also where a lot of cases settle once each side sees what the other is actually working with.
Discovery in a straightforward case runs three to six months. Complex cases with disputed liability, commercial vehicles, or catastrophic injuries take longer.
Mediation
Florida requires mediation before most civil trials. A neutral mediator sits down with both sides and works toward a number everyone can live with. Most car accident lawsuits settle at or before mediation.
Trial
If mediation fails, you go to trial. Jury selection, opening statements, witnesses, closing arguments, verdict. A car accident trial usually runs two to five days. Post-trial motions or an appeal by either side can add more time on top of that.
What Pushes Cases Toward the Longer End
Disputed liability is the biggest factor. If the other driver denies fault, or if fault is split between you and the other driver, expect a longer fight. Florida’s modified comparative fault rule (also changed in 2023) can reduce or wipe out your recovery if you’re found more than 50% at fault. Insurers push harder when there’s room to argue about who caused the crash.
Serious injuries extend timelines because the stakes are higher. A broken wrist case settles faster than a traumatic brain injury case where future medical costs run into six figures.
Uninsured or underinsured drivers add a layer. If the at-fault driver has no insurance or minimal coverage, your attorney may be going after your own UM/UIM policy instead, which involves a different set of negotiations.
Multiple defendants slow things down. Truck accidents, rideshare accidents, and crashes involving road defects often pull in several parties, each with their own insurer and attorney.
What Can Speed Things Up
Good documentation from day one. A police report filed the day of the accident. Medical treatment that starts right away and stays consistent. Photos of the scene and the vehicles.
The attorney you hire matters too. One who knows Florida’s courts, has tried cases against the major carriers, and knows how to value a case accurately tends to move faster, because neither side wastes months on offers that were never going to close the gap.
Nicholas Martino holds a Master of Laws in Trial Advocacy with Honors from Temple University Beasley School of Law, ranked among the top two trial programs in the country. Michael McCabe is a licensed Professional Engineer with a civil engineering background. When technical questions come up about vehicle damage, road conditions, or how a crash happened, he’s not hiring an outside expert to figure it out. That combination tends to shorten the investigation phase and sharpen your position going into negotiations.
Should You Settle or File a Lawsuit?
Settlement is faster and certain. Trial is slower and carries real risk. But “just settle” isn’t automatically the right call.
Insurance companies aren’t on your side. Their job is to close claims for as little as possible. If your demand reflects your actual losses and they won’t budge, filing suit is often the only thing that gets a fair result.
An attorney who’s willing to take cases to trial tends to get better settlement offers than one who never does. Insurers know the difference, and so do their adjusters.
The Bottom Line
Case settles without litigation: six to eighteen months. Case is filed and settles during litigation: twelve to thirty months. Case goes to trial: two to four years, sometimes longer.
That’s a real range, and your case has its own facts. The only way to get a realistic estimate is to talk to a car accident attorney who’s looked at what actually happened.
Martino & McCabe handles car accident cases throughout Ponte Vedra Beach, Jacksonville, and St. Johns County. Call (904) 999-4657 or reach out at consultation@martinomccabe.com for a free consultation.

Michael J. McCabe, is a partner and owner of Martino & McCabe and practices in the areas of personally injury, auto accidents, and premises liability. He is a licensed Professional Engineer and received his Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from Florida State University. He earned his Juris Doctor degree from Florida Coastal School of Law in 2005 while continuing to work as a Professional Engineer.
