Rear-End Collision in Las Vegas: Your Rights and Next Steps
In Nevada, the rear driver in a rear-end collision is almost always presumed to be at fault because every driver must maintain a safe following distance under NRS 484B.127. This presumption gives the lead driver a strong starting position for an injury claim. Rear-end collisions are the most common crash type in the Las Vegas Valley, occurring daily on I-15, I-215 Beltway, US-95, and congested surface streets like Las Vegas Boulevard (the Strip), Tropicana Avenue, Flamingo Road, and Charleston Boulevard. Even low-speed rear-end crashes cause serious injuries — whiplash, herniated discs, and concussions happen at speeds under 15 mph. Nevada is an at-fault state, meaning the driver who caused the crash is liable for your damages. You have 2 years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit (NRS 11.190(4)(e)). Here is exactly what to do after a rear-end collision in Las Vegas to protect your health and your legal rights.
Check your rear-end collision claim in 60 seconds — see your filing deadline, your legal options, and your next steps. Completely free.
Key Takeaways
- In Nevada, the rear driver is almost always presumed at fault because drivers must maintain a safe following distance (NRS 484B.127).
- Whiplash symptoms may not appear for 24-72 hours — get medical attention even if you feel fine at the scene.
- Nevada's modified comparative negligence rule (NRS 41.141) means you can recover damages as long as you are less than 51% at fault. At 51% or more, you recover nothing.
- You have 2 years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit in Nevada (NRS 11.190(4)(e)).
- Do not accept a quick settlement offer from the other driver's insurance — it is almost always less than your claim is worth.
- I-15, I-215, and US-95 are the most common locations for rear-end collisions in Las Vegas due to heavy traffic, tourist congestion, and sudden slowdowns near casino exits.
Check for injuries and call 911
After a rear-end collision, check yourself and your passengers for injuries before doing anything else. Call 911 even if the crash seems minor. Many rear-end collision injuries — especially whiplash, concussions, and soft tissue damage — do not produce immediate symptoms. Adrenaline masks pain. You may feel fine at the scene and wake up the next morning unable to turn your head.
When you call 911, tell the dispatcher your location (highway, mile marker, cross streets), the number of vehicles involved, and whether anyone is visibly injured. Stay in your vehicle with your seatbelt on if you are on I-15 or US-95 — secondary crashes on Las Vegas highways kill people every year. If you are on a surface street and it is safe to move, pull to the shoulder or a parking lot to avoid blocking traffic.
Wait for police to arrive. Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department (LVMPD) or Nevada Highway Patrol (for highway crashes) will create an accident report. The officer will collect statements from both drivers, note road and weather conditions, and may issue a citation to the rear driver for following too closely under NRS 484B.127. Get the report number before officers leave — you will need it for your insurance claim. For non-emergencies, LVMPD can be reached at (702) 828-3111.
Document the scene thoroughly
While you wait for police, document everything. Use your phone to photograph both vehicles from multiple angles, focusing on the rear damage to your car and the front damage to the other vehicle. Photograph the license plates of all vehicles involved, the surrounding road layout, traffic signals, and any relevant road conditions (wet pavement, construction zones, poor visibility from desert sun glare).
Take photos of any visible injuries — bruising, abrasions, swelling. If you have a dashcam, preserve the footage immediately. Note the time, weather conditions, traffic density, and exactly where the crash occurred. Las Vegas has extensive casino and traffic camera coverage — if the crash happened near the Strip, Downtown, or a major intersection, surveillance footage may exist. If there are witnesses, get their names and phone numbers. Witness statements about the other driver's behavior before the crash (tailgating, looking at a phone, speeding) strengthen your claim significantly.
Exchange insurance information with the other driver. Get their name, phone number, insurance company, policy number, driver's license number, and license plate number. Do not discuss fault at the scene. Do not apologize. Anything you say can be used against you later. Stick to the facts when giving your statement to police.
Get medical attention within 24 hours
Rear-end collisions cause a distinctive set of injuries because the impact comes from behind with no warning, meaning your body has no time to brace. The most common injury is whiplash — the rapid back-and-forth motion of the head and neck that damages muscles, ligaments, and tendons in the cervical spine. Whiplash symptoms often take 24-72 hours to appear and can include neck pain, stiffness, headaches, dizziness, blurred vision, and difficulty concentrating.
Other common rear-end collision injuries include herniated or bulging discs in the cervical and lumbar spine, concussions and mild traumatic brain injuries (even without hitting your head — the brain can strike the inside of the skull from sudden deceleration), shoulder injuries from the seatbelt, and lower back injuries. At higher speeds, rear-end crashes cause fractures, spinal cord injuries, and facial injuries from airbag deployment.
Visit an emergency room, urgent care, or your primary care physician within 24 hours of the accident. University Medical Center (UMC) is the only Level I trauma center in all of Nevada and handles the most serious crash injuries. Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center is a Level II trauma center and one of the busiest ERs in Las Vegas. Tell the doctor you were in a rear-end collision and describe all symptoms, even minor ones. The medical record from this visit establishes the connection between the crash and your injuries. Follow every treatment recommendation — gaps in treatment give insurance adjusters ammunition to argue your injuries are not serious.
Why the rear driver is almost always at fault in Nevada
Nevada follows a legal principle that the rear driver in a rear-end collision is presumed to be at fault. The reasoning is straightforward: every driver has a duty to maintain a safe following distance under NRS 484B.127 and to keep a proper lookout. If you rear-end someone, you were either following too closely, not paying attention, or driving too fast to stop in time.
This is a rebuttable presumption — the rear driver can challenge it. Common defenses include: the lead driver made a sudden, unexpected stop with no legitimate reason (brake check); the lead driver's brake lights were not working; a third vehicle pushed the rear driver into the lead vehicle (chain-reaction crash); or the lead driver cut off the rear driver and immediately braked. These defenses can work, but the rear driver bears the burden of proving them.
For the lead driver, the fault presumption is a significant advantage. The insurance company for the rear driver will almost certainly accept liability in a straightforward rear-end collision. The dispute is usually about damages — how much your injuries are worth — not who caused the crash. This means your case is likely to settle, often without filing a lawsuit, as long as your injuries and damages are well-documented.
How comparative negligence applies in Nevada
Nevada uses a modified comparative negligence system with a 51% bar (NRS 41.141). Even when the rear driver is primarily at fault, the insurance company may argue that the lead driver shared some responsibility. Common arguments include: you stopped suddenly for no reason, your brake lights were out, you were distracted, or you failed to signal before slowing down.
Under Nevada law, your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault. If a jury finds you 20% at fault and your damages are $100,000, you recover $80,000. The critical threshold in Nevada is 51% — if you are found 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing. This is slightly more favorable than some states that use a 50% bar. In most straightforward rear-end collisions, the lead driver's fault percentage is zero or minimal, but you should be aware that the insurance company will look for any angle to reduce the payout.
The best way to protect yourself from comparative fault arguments is documentation. A police report noting the rear driver was cited for following too closely, witness statements confirming the rear driver was tailgating or on a phone, and dashcam footage showing normal driving behavior on your part all make comparative fault arguments harder for the defense to sustain.
Dealing with the insurance company
After a rear-end collision in Las Vegas, the other driver's insurance company will contact you — often within days. They may sound sympathetic and offer a quick settlement. Be cautious. The adjuster's job is to close your claim for as little money as possible. The first settlement offer is almost always a fraction of what your claim is worth, especially before you know the full extent of your injuries.
Do not give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance company without understanding your rights. You are not legally required to do so. Do not sign any medical authorization forms — the insurer may use broad authorizations to dig through your entire medical history looking for pre-existing conditions to blame. Report the accident to your own insurance company, but keep your description factual and brief.
Nevada requires minimum liability coverage of $25,000 per person, $50,000 per accident for bodily injury, and $20,000 for property damage (NRS 485.185). If the rear driver carries only the minimum and your injuries are serious, the policy limits may not cover your damages. In that case, your own underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage kicks in. About 10-12% of Nevada drivers are uninsured (Insurance Research Council) — if the rear driver has no insurance, your uninsured motorist (UM) coverage applies.
Key deadlines for rear-end collision claims in Nevada
Nevada's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is 2 years from the date of injury (NRS 11.190(4)(e)). For property damage only, the deadline is 3 years (NRS 11.190(3)(c)). These are hard deadlines — miss them and your claim is permanently barred.
Under Nevada law (NRS 484E.030), if you are involved in an accident that results in injury, death, or property damage, you must immediately notify law enforcement. Nevada also requires drivers to exchange information at the scene. If the crash involves injury or death, the officer's report will be filed with the Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles. For crashes involving only property damage over $750, you must file a report with the DMV within 10 days (NRS 484E.070).
Do not assume the 2-year deadline gives you plenty of time. Whiplash and soft tissue injuries can take months to reach maximum medical improvement, and you need to know the full extent of your injuries before settling. But waiting too long risks losing evidence — dashcam footage gets overwritten, witnesses forget, and the insurance company may argue the delay shows your injuries were not serious. File your claim promptly and let the negotiation process run while you complete treatment.
Get a free assessment of your rear-end collision claim
Want to understand your options after a rear-end collision in Las Vegas? Take our free 2-minute assessment. You will answer a few questions about your accident and injuries, and we will provide a personalized report covering your potential claim value — including how fault, insurance coverage, and the severity of your injuries affect your recovery — and connect you with a Las Vegas personal injury attorney experienced in rear-end collision cases.
Rear-end collisions are frustrating because they are almost always preventable. Someone was following too closely, not paying attention, or looking at their phone — and you paid the price. Nevada law puts the burden of proof squarely on the rear driver. Use that advantage. Start with the assessment at /assessment/. It is free, confidential, and takes less time than waiting on hold with an insurance company.