Uninsured DriverUpdated March 2026

Hit by an Uninsured Driver in Milwaukee: What Are Your Options?

If you're hit by an uninsured driver in Milwaukee, your own uninsured motorist (UM) coverage is your primary protection. Wisconsin is one of the few states that makes UM coverage mandatory — every auto liability policy in the state must include it under Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4). That means if the other driver has no insurance, you still have a way to recover compensation through your own policy. About 15% of Wisconsin drivers are uninsured, which means roughly 1 in 7 drivers on Milwaukee roads may have no coverage. Milwaukee County sees over 25,000 traffic crashes per year, and at that uninsured rate, thousands of those involve at least one uninsured driver. Here is what to do and what options you have.

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Key Takeaways

  • Wisconsin requires every auto liability policy to include uninsured motorist (UM) coverage — you cannot waive or reject it (Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4)).
  • Minimum UM coverage in Wisconsin is $25,000 per person / $50,000 per accident for bodily injury.
  • About 15% of Wisconsin drivers are uninsured — roughly 1 in 7 drivers on the road, according to Insurance Research Council data.
  • You can sue an uninsured driver directly in Milwaukee County Circuit Court, but collecting a judgment can be difficult if the driver lacks assets.
  • Wisconsin's modified comparative negligence rule (Wis. Stat. § 895.045) still applies — your UM insurer can argue you were partially at fault to reduce the payout.
  • You have 3 years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit in Wisconsin (Wis. Stat. § 893.54).
1

What to do at the scene

Call 911 immediately. Tell the responding officer that the other driver may not have insurance — ask the officer to verify insurance status and document it in the police report. Under Wisconsin law, all drivers must carry liability insurance (Wis. Stat. § 344.62), and driving without it is a traffic violation punishable by a fine of up to $500.

Document everything, even if the other driver has no insurance. Photograph all vehicles, damage, license plates, road conditions, traffic signals, and your injuries. Get the uninsured driver's name, address, phone number, and driver's license number. Without insurance, you will need to identify the driver personally if you file a UM claim or a lawsuit.

Get witness contact information. Witnesses are especially important in uninsured driver cases because your own insurance company — the one paying your UM claim — will scrutinize fault more carefully than if you were filing against another company. An independent witness confirming the other driver was at fault strengthens your UM claim significantly. Milwaukee's major corridors like I-94, I-43, and Highway 45 have high crash rates, so witnesses are often available.

2

File a UM claim with your own insurance company

Your first step after an uninsured driver accident is to file a claim under your own uninsured motorist (UM) coverage. Every auto liability policy in Wisconsin must include UM bodily injury coverage of at least $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident (Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4)). You cannot waive or reject this coverage — it is built into your policy by law.

Filing a UM claim feels strange because you are making a claim against your own insurer. But UM coverage exists for exactly this situation. Your insurer steps into the shoes of the missing insurance company and pays your bodily injury damages up to your UM policy limits. If you purchased UM coverage above the state minimum, your limits may be significantly higher.

Be aware that your own insurer is not on your side in a UM claim. They are paying out of their own pocket, so they have every incentive to minimize the amount. They may argue you were partially at fault (reducing the payout under Wisconsin's comparative negligence rule), dispute the severity of your injuries, or challenge whether your medical treatment was reasonable and necessary. Treat the UM claim process like you would any other insurance claim — document everything and consider getting an attorney involved.

3

Understand what UM coverage does and does not cover

UM coverage in Wisconsin covers bodily injury only — not property damage. If the uninsured driver damaged your vehicle, UM does not pay for repairs. For vehicle damage, you would need to use your own collision coverage (if you carry it) or sue the uninsured driver directly for property damage costs.

UM coverage pays for medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other bodily injury damages — the same categories of compensation you would recover from the at-fault driver's liability policy if they had one. The payout is capped at your UM policy limits. If your damages exceed your UM limits, you can pursue the uninsured driver in court for the remaining amount.

Wisconsin also requires insurers to offer underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage (Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4m)), though you may have declined it. UIM is different from UM — it applies when the at-fault driver has insurance but not enough to cover your damages. If the at-fault driver has no insurance at all, UM coverage applies, not UIM.

4

Can you sue the uninsured driver directly?

Yes. You have the legal right to file a personal injury lawsuit against an uninsured driver in Wisconsin. You would file in Milwaukee County Circuit Court if the accident happened in Milwaukee. You must prove the other driver was at fault and that you suffered injuries and damages as a result.

The practical challenge is collection. Many uninsured drivers lack assets — they do not carry insurance because they cannot afford it, which often means they cannot pay a court judgment either. However, suing is not always pointless. If the driver owns property, has wages that can be garnished, or may acquire assets in the future, a judgment can be enforced. Wisconsin judgments are valid for 20 years (Wis. Stat. § 893.40) and can be renewed.

Most attorneys recommend filing your UM claim first for immediate recovery, then considering a lawsuit against the uninsured driver for any damages that exceed your UM policy limits. An attorney can evaluate whether the uninsured driver has assets worth pursuing.

5

Other sources of compensation

Beyond UM coverage and a lawsuit, you may have other options. If you carry collision coverage on your auto policy, it will pay for vehicle repairs regardless of who was at fault (minus your deductible). Your health insurance can cover medical bills while the UM claim is processed — though under Wisconsin's subrogation rules, your health insurer may seek reimbursement from your UM settlement. If you have medical payments (MedPay) coverage on your auto policy, it pays medical expenses up to its limit regardless of fault — and it pays faster than a UM claim.

If the uninsured driver was operating a vehicle owned by someone else, the vehicle owner's liability insurance may cover the accident. Wisconsin's owner liability statute (Wis. Stat. § 344.01(2)(am)) can hold vehicle owners responsible for damages caused by someone they allowed to drive their vehicle. This is worth investigating if the uninsured driver was borrowing a friend's or family member's car.

If the accident involved a commercial vehicle or an employer-owned vehicle, the employer's insurance may provide coverage even if the driver personally had no insurance. Workers' compensation may also apply if you were injured while working at the time of the crash.

6

Wisconsin's comparative negligence rule applies to UM claims

Wisconsin's modified comparative negligence system (Wis. Stat. § 895.045) applies to UM claims just as it does to any other personal injury claim. Your own insurer can argue that you were partially at fault for the accident, which reduces your UM payout by your percentage of fault.

For example, if your damages total $80,000 and the insurer successfully argues you were 25% at fault, your UM payout would be reduced to $60,000. If the insurer argues you were 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing from your UM coverage.

This is one of the most important reasons to hire an attorney for a UM claim. Your own insurer has a financial incentive to attribute fault to you, and they will use the same tactics any opposing insurance company would. An attorney can push back on unjustified fault allocations and protect your recovery.

7

Deadlines and next steps

Wisconsin's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is 3 years from the date of injury (Wis. Stat. § 893.54). This deadline applies to both lawsuits against the uninsured driver and to disputes with your own UM insurer. For wrongful death claims, the deadline is 2 years (Wis. Stat. § 893.54(2m)).

File your UM claim as soon as possible after the accident. The sooner you start the process, the sooner you can begin receiving compensation for medical bills and lost wages. Keep detailed records of all medical treatment, expenses, missed work, and how your injuries affect your daily life.

8

Get Your Free Injury Claim Check

Want to understand your options after being hit by an uninsured driver in Milwaukee? Get your free Injury Claim Check. You will answer a few questions about your accident and injuries, and we will provide a personalized report covering your potential claim value — including what UM coverage may be available, whether a lawsuit makes sense, and the strength of your claim — and connect you with a Milwaukee personal injury attorney experienced in uninsured motorist cases.

Being hit by an uninsured driver is frustrating, but it does not mean you are out of options. Wisconsin's mandatory UM coverage ensures you have at least a baseline of protection. Start with the Injury Claim Check to learn exactly what your options are. It is free, confidential, and takes about 60 seconds.

Uninsured Driver Accidents in Milwaukee at a Glance

~15%

of Wisconsin drivers are uninsured — roughly 1 in 7 drivers on Milwaukee roads

Insurance Research Council, 2022 data

$25K / $50K

mandatory minimum uninsured motorist (UM) coverage in every Wisconsin auto policy (per person / per accident)

Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4)

111

traffic fatalities in Milwaukee County in 2022 — crash deaths have been rising in the county even as they decline statewide

Wisconsin Policy Forum / WisDOT, 2022 data

3 Years

statute of limitations for personal injury claims in Wisconsin

Wis. Stat. § 893.54

How common are uninsured driver accidents in Milwaukee?

With roughly 15% of Wisconsin drivers lacking insurance, the odds of being hit by an uninsured motorist in Milwaukee are significant. Milwaukee County sees over 25,000 traffic crashes per year, and traffic fatalities in the county have been rising — 111 people died in 101 fatal crashes in 2022 alone — even as traffic deaths have declined across the rest of Wisconsin. Applying the statewide uninsured rate to Milwaukee's crash volume means thousands of crashes per year in the county involve at least one uninsured driver. Milwaukee's high-crash corridors including I-94, I-43, 27th Street, and Capitol Drive see disproportionate accident rates.

Penalties for driving uninsured in Wisconsin

Wisconsin has required liability insurance since June 1, 2010 (enacted by 2009 Wisconsin Act 28). Driving without insurance is a traffic violation under Wis. Stat. § 344.62, punishable by a fine of up to $500. If an uninsured driver causes an accident, the DMV can suspend their driver's license and vehicle registration. To reinstate, the driver must serve a 1-year suspension or file an SR-22 certificate, plus pay reinstatement fees. Despite these penalties, enforcement gaps persist — Wisconsin's uninsured rate increased from about 13.3% in 2019 to roughly 15% more recently.

Medical treatment after an accident in Milwaukee

If you are injured in a collision with an uninsured driver in Milwaukee, seek medical attention immediately. Froedtert Hospital is Milwaukee's only adult Level I trauma center and handles the most critical injuries. Ascension Columbia St. Mary's is a Level II trauma center, and Children's Wisconsin provides pediatric trauma care. For non-emergency injuries, any urgent care center can document your condition. Tell your doctor you were in a car accident and describe all symptoms. Your medical records are the foundation of your UM claim, and any gap in treatment gives the insurer ammunition to argue your injuries are not serious.

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Uninsured Driver Accident FAQ — Milwaukee

UM coverage is a component of your own auto insurance policy that pays for your bodily injury damages when you are hit by a driver who has no liability insurance. In Wisconsin, every auto liability policy must include UM coverage — it is mandatory and cannot be waived (Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4)). Minimum UM limits are $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident.

No. Unlike many states that allow drivers to waive UM coverage, Wisconsin makes it mandatory. Every auto liability policy must include UM bodily injury coverage of at least $25,000/$50,000 (Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4)). You can purchase higher limits, but you cannot opt out of UM coverage entirely.

UM (uninsured motorist) coverage applies when the at-fault driver has no insurance at all. UIM (underinsured motorist) coverage applies when the at-fault driver has insurance but not enough to cover your damages. UM is mandatory in Wisconsin; UIM must be offered by your insurer but you can decline it in writing (Wis. Stat. § 632.32(4m)). If you declined UIM and the at-fault driver has some but insufficient coverage, you may not have enough protection.

No. Wisconsin's mandatory UM coverage applies only to bodily injury damages. For vehicle damage caused by an uninsured driver, you would use your own collision coverage (if you carry it) or sue the uninsured driver for property damage. This is an important gap — if you do not carry collision coverage, you may be responsible for your own vehicle repairs.

Yes. You can file a personal injury lawsuit in Milwaukee County Circuit Court. The challenge is practical — uninsured drivers often lack assets to pay a judgment. However, Wisconsin judgments are valid for 20 years (Wis. Stat. § 893.40) and can be enforced through wage garnishment and property liens. Most attorneys recommend filing a UM claim first, then pursuing a lawsuit for damages exceeding your UM limits.

According to Insurance Research Council data, roughly 15% of Wisconsin drivers are uninsured — about 1 in 7 drivers on the road. This rate increased from approximately 13.3% in 2019, partly due to economic pressures during and after the pandemic. Wisconsin's rate is close to the national average.

It depends on your insurer and policy. In general, UM claims are not supposed to be held against you because you were not at fault — the claim exists because someone else failed to carry insurance. However, some insurers may factor any claim into your rate calculation. Check your policy or ask your agent about their UM claim surcharge policy before filing.

If the uninsured driver was operating a vehicle owned by someone else, the vehicle owner's liability insurance may cover the accident. Wisconsin's owner liability provisions (Wis. Stat. § 344.01(2)(am)) can hold vehicle owners responsible for damages caused by someone they permitted to drive their vehicle. This can be an important alternative source of insurance coverage.

Yes. Wisconsin's modified comparative negligence rule (Wis. Stat. § 895.045) applies to UM claims. Your own insurer can argue you were partially at fault, reducing your payout by your percentage of fault. If you are found 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing from your UM coverage. This is why having an attorney matters — your own insurer has an incentive to attribute fault to you.

Wisconsin's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is 3 years from the date of injury (Wis. Stat. § 893.54). This applies to both lawsuits against the uninsured driver and disputes with your own insurer over a UM claim. Wrongful death claims have a 2-year deadline. File your UM claim as soon as possible — do not wait until the statute is about to expire.

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InjuryNextSteps.com provides general informational content and is not a law firm. The information on this page does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Every case is different. Contacting us does not create an attorney-client relationship. If you need legal advice, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. The legal information on this page references Wisconsin statutes and is current as of March 2026 but laws may change. Always verify legal questions with a qualified attorney.

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