Brandon has grown from a Tampa suburb into a busy commercial hub of eastern Hillsborough County, and its roads carry the strain. The corridors that make Brandon convenient, Brandon Boulevard, the I-75 interchange, and the shopping-center arterials, are also where its crashes concentrate. Hillsborough County records more than twenty-six thousand crashes in a typical year, and Brandon’s share reflects the constant congestion moving through it. When another driver’s carelessness causes a crash here, Florida law gives the injured person a way to recover, and this page explains how.
Brandon crash hot spots
The roads where Brandon crashes happen
Brandon Boulevard, which is State Road 60, is the main artery through the community and consistently one of the most dangerous roads in all of Hillsborough County, with the stretch from Falkenburg Road east appearing again and again on county crash reports. Its intersection with the I-75 interchange is one of the most crash-prone points in the entire county, where highway-speed traffic meets surface-road congestion. Bloomingdale Avenue, at Bell Shoals Road and at Providence Road, ranks among the county’s top ten most dangerous intersections. Causeway Boulevard and Falkenburg Road, lined with shopping centers and warehouses, produce constant turning and rear-end crashes, and the I-75 interchanges at Causeway and Gibsonton Drive see serious and sometimes fatal wrecks, often involving commercial trucks. Knowing where these crashes cluster is part of how a Brandon case is investigated.
How a Florida car accident claim works
Florida is a no-fault state, which shapes every crash claim. After a collision, your own Personal Injury Protection coverage pays first, covering a portion of your medical bills and lost wages regardless of who caused the crash, and Florida law requires you to seek treatment within fourteen days to keep that coverage. In a serious case, that is only the beginning. When an injury is serious and permanent enough to cross Florida’s injury threshold, you can step outside no-fault and pursue the at-fault driver and their insurer for the full extent of your harm, including the pain and the losses no-fault does not cover. Florida also applies comparative fault, so insurers routinely try to shift part of the blame onto the injured person. The mechanics are covered in depth on our Florida car accident overview and its guide to the serious-injury threshold.
Where your Brandon case is heard, and getting care
Brandon is in Hillsborough County, part of Florida’s Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, so a crash lawsuit is generally filed in the Hillsborough County civil court in downtown Tampa. Most claims resolve through insurance long before a lawsuit is necessary, but the cases that settle for full value are prepared from the start as if they will be tried. Prompt medical care matters just as much in the early days. Serious injuries in the area are often treated at HCA Florida Brandon Hospital or at Tampa General, the region’s Level I trauma center, and getting seen quickly both protects your health and builds the record that ties your injuries to the crash. Remember Florida’s fourteen-day window to seek treatment and keep your PIP coverage. I also serve the surrounding communities, including Valrico, Bloomingdale, Seffner, and Gibsonton.
The crashes and injuries these cases involve
Brandon’s crashes reflect its roads. The congested intersections along Brandon Boulevard and Causeway Boulevard produce frequent T-bone and rear-end collisions, often when a driver tries to beat a light or misjudges an oncoming vehicle while turning, and side-impact crashes at these intersections cause some of the most serious injuries. The I-75 interchanges add high-speed and commercial-truck wrecks to the mix. Motorcyclists face real danger at the busy SR 60 and I-75 approaches, where drivers fail to check blind spots. Some cases involve rideshare vehicles or hit-and-run drivers, and Hillsborough sees thousands of hit-and-run crashes a year. Sorting out exactly how a crash happened, and everyone responsible, is the first work of the case.
What a car accident case can recover
When a crash causes real injury, a Florida claim can seek the full range of losses: the cost of past and future medical care, the income lost while you could not work, the earning capacity lost when an injury changes what you can do for a living, and compensation for the pain, the disability, and the disruption the crash caused. In a case where a crash took a life, the surviving family can bring a wrongful death claim for their own losses. What a case is worth turns on the severity and permanence of the injury and the strength of the proof, never on a number promised at the first phone call, and building the case to show the full extent of the harm is what protects its value.
Comparative fault and what to do after a crash
Because Florida applies comparative fault, the insurer will almost always try to pin some of the blame on you, since every percentage of fault it shifts onto the injured person lowers what it has to pay. That argument is often the heart of the fight, and it is why the evidence, the crash reconstruction, the vehicle data, the scene, and the medical records, matters so much. A few steps in the days after a crash protect both your health and your claim: get medical care promptly and follow through with it, document the scene and the other driver’s information if you can, report the crash, and keep every record. Be careful about giving a recorded statement or accepting a quick settlement before you know the full extent of your injuries, because early offers are built to close a claim cheaply before its real cost is clear.
A car accident case is won on the documents and the proof, the crash reconstruction, the vehicle and scene evidence, the medical records, and the cross-examination of the insurer’s experts and hired doctors, and that is the kind of detail-driven work I have built my career on. I represent injured people, not insurance companies, and I came up in the courtroom as a public defender, trying cases and cross-examining witnesses constantly, so I am ready to take a Brandon case to a jury when that is what fair value requires. I handle each case personally, and I know the roads, the courts, and the community here. Learn more about my background.
Common Questions
Do I have a case after a Brandon car accident?
If another driver’s carelessness caused the crash and you were injured, likely yes. Florida no-fault means your own PIP pays first, and if the injury is serious enough to cross Florida’s threshold, you can pursue the at-fault driver for the full harm, including pain and suffering.
What are the most dangerous roads in Brandon?
Brandon Boulevard, which is State Road 60, is one of the most dangerous roads in the county, and its I-75 interchange and the Bloomingdale Avenue intersections at Bell Shoals and Providence Roads are among the worst crash sites in Hillsborough.
How long do I have to file after a Brandon crash?
For most crash injury claims the deadline is now two years from the crash, shortened from four by a 2023 change in the law. Because the clock is short and evidence fades, an early review protects your options.
Where would my Brandon case be heard?
Brandon is in Hillsborough County, part of Florida’s Thirteenth Judicial Circuit, so a lawsuit would generally be filed in the Hillsborough County civil court in Tampa. Most claims resolve through insurance before a lawsuit is needed.
What will a Brandon car accident case cost me?
These cases are handled on contingency, so you pay no attorney’s fees unless there is a recovery, and case costs are advanced rather than paid up front. The first consultation is free.

