Common Motorcycle Accident Injuries in New Jersey: The Medical and Legal Reality
The injuries motorcyclists suffer most often in New Jersey tend to be more serious than what you'd see in a typical car crash because there's nothing between the rider and the road. The most common include:
- Leg and foot fractures. Lower extremity injuries are the most frequent, often requiring surgery, hardware, and months of physical therapy.
- Traumatic brain injuries. Even riders wearing helmets can suffer concussions or more severe brain damage from the force of impact.
- Road rash. Sliding across pavement tears through skin and tissue, sometimes requiring skin grafts and leaving permanent scarring.
Here's what makes motorcycle accidents involving these injuries different in New Jersey: the insurance rules aren't the same as they are for cars. Most auto policies include something called Personal Injury Protection (PIP), which helps cover your medical bills regardless of fault. But motorcycle policies often don't include PIP unless you specifically added it. That means your medical coverage depends heavily on who was at fault and what kind of insurance everyone involved was carrying.
There's another problem that riders face. Insurance adjusters often view motorcyclists differently than other drivers. They may see riding as inherently risky and assume the rider shares some blame for getting hurt, even when the evidence doesn't support that. This bias can shift the fault percentage higher than it should be, and when fault shifts, your compensation shrinks.
If you're recovering from a crash and aren't sure how your injuries affect your legal options, contact Onal Injury Law. We'll review the crash report and your medical records and give you an honest picture of what your claim is worth.
Get a Free ConsultationKey Takeaways for Common Motorcycle Accident Injuries in New Jersey
- Leg fractures, brain trauma, and road rash are the most common injuries. This matters because New Jersey law treats motorcycle medical coverage differently from car insurance, which directly impacts how your medical bills get paid after a crash.
- Your motorcycle insurance likely excludes PIP medical coverage. Unlike standard car insurance, most motorcycle policies do not pay for your medical treatment, meaning your private health insurer covers the bills and will then seek reimbursement from your settlement.
- Insurance companies may use the Helmet Defense to reduce your payout. If you were not wearing a DOT-approved helmet, they will argue it worsened your head injury, which is a tactic used to lower the value of your claim under comparative negligence rules.
Lower Extremity Injuries: The Most Frequent Outcome
Leg, foot, and ankle injuries are statistically the most frequent injuries motorcyclists sustain. This happens because the motorcycle itself is a heavy object—weighing 400 to 900 pounds—that tends to fall onto the rider during a slide.
When a car bumper impacts a rider's leg, or the bike crushes the limb against the asphalt, the result is frequently a fracture of the tibia and fibula (the shin bones). These are commonly compound or open fractures, where the bone fragments pierce the skin.
Open fractures introduce bacteria to the bone marrow, creating a high risk of osteomyelitis (bone infection). Treating this requires immediate surgery to install hardware, such as intramedullary rods, plates, and screws.
While this hardware stabilizes the bone, it presents a long-term legal and medical complication. Hardware may need to be removed years later if it causes pain or irritation. This future surgery must be accounted for in your settlement demand now , not later.
The Danger of Crush Injuries
It is possible to suffer severe damage without breaking a bone. When a heavy bike lands on a leg, it causes a crush injury. This damages the soft tissue and muscles.
A severe complication of crush injuries is Compartment Syndrome. This occurs when pressure builds up inside the muscle compartments, cutting off blood flow. It is a surgical emergency requiring a fasciotomy, which involves slicing open the limb to relieve pressure.
Failure to diagnose this immediately leads to permanent muscle death or amputation. If you are experiencing intense pressure in your leg after a crash, this is a medical emergency.
Knee and Ligament Damage
Riders also frequently suffer from ligament tears, specifically to the ACL or MCL. This happens even without a direct hit to the knee. If you grip the tank with your knees to brace for impact, the sudden deceleration forces the femur forward while the tibia stays planted.
This shearing force tears the ligaments. Insurance adjusters sometimes try to label these as soft tissue injuries to minimize their value. In reality, they result in permanent instability and likely future arthritis.
Speak With a Motorcycle Accident LawyerTraumatic Brain Injuries (TBI) and Helmet Law Nuance
New Jersey law is strict regarding head protection. Under N.J.S.A. 39:3-76.7 , all riders and passengers must wear a DOT-approved helmet. However, compliance with the law does not guarantee safety from brain injury.
A helmet is designed to prevent open skull fractures and withstand penetration. It cannot, however, stop the brain from moving inside the skull. During a high-speed impact, the head stops moving, but the brain continues its forward momentum until it strikes the interior of the skull. This is known as a coup-contrecoup injury.
This means you may suffer a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) even while wearing a top-tier, full-face helmet. Symptoms range from mild concussions to severe cognitive impairment.
The Helmet Defense Strategy
Insurance companies pay close attention to the helmet you were wearing. They look for novelty helmets that lack DOT certification. If you were wearing a non-compliant helmet, or no helmet at all, they will raise the Helmet Defense.
This is a legal argument based on comparative negligence. They do not argue that the lack of a helmet caused the accident (that would be illogical). Instead, they argue it caused the injury or made it worse.
Defense attorneys use this to argue for a reduction in your compensation. They will claim that had you worn a proper helmet, your brain injury would be less severe. This effectively reduces the value of your head injury claim, sometimes significantly.
The Spectrum of TBI
Brain injuries are deceptively difficult to diagnose immediately. In the chaos of the ER, doctors prioritize life-threatening bleeding or lung collapses. Mild TBIs sometimes go unnoticed until weeks later.
- Mild TBI (Concussion): You might experience memory fog, mood swings, or sensitivity to light.
- Moderate to Severe TBI: This involves long-term cognitive deficits, personality changes, and the inability to return to work.
We advise having family members monitor your behavior after a crash. We frequently rely on their testimony to prove the invisible damages of a brain injury that an MRI might miss.
Road Rash: A Serious Friction Burn
The term road rash sounds minor. It implies a skinned knee you might get on a playground. In a motorcycle accident context, this term is dangerously misleading. Road rash is a friction burn that shreds layers of skin and tissue.
Medical professionals classify road rash by degrees, similar to thermal burns. The classification determines both the treatment plan and the potential legal value of the scarring.
- First Degree: The skin is red and tender, but not broken. This heals quickly.
- Second Degree: The outer layer of skin breaks. Debris from the road, such as gravel, asphalt, and glass, becomes embedded in the wound. This requires painful scrubbing (debridement) to prevent infection.
- Third Degree: The skin is completely worn away, exposing fat, muscle, or bone. This requires skin grafting and results in significant scarring.
Scarring and Disfigurement
The long-term impact of road rash is permanent scarring. In New Jersey, permanent disfigurement is a specific category of damages. It allows a victim to bypass certain legal thresholds that limit lawsuits for lesser injuries.
Insurance adjusters typically try to downplay scarring, especially on men, arguing it is merely cosmetic. We reject this premise. Permanent scarring is a constant reminder of the trauma and affects your quality of life.
Documentation is the primary tool here. You must take high-resolution photos of the injuries as they heal. This photographic timeline serves as indisputable evidence of the pain and duration of your recovery.
Biker's Arm and Nerve Damage (Brachial Plexus)
One of the most debilitating injuries unique to motorcyclists is damage to the brachial plexus. This is the network of nerves that sends signals from your spine to your shoulder, arm, and hand.
Here's how it works: the rider lands on the point of the shoulder, or the head is forced violently away from the shoulder during the fall. This stretches or tears the nerves. In the medical and riding community, this is notoriously known as Biker's Arm.
Avulsion vs. Stretch
The severity depends on how the nerve is damaged. A stretch injury (neuropraxia) may heal over time with therapy. An avulsion, however, occurs when the nerve is torn completely away from the spinal cord.
Avulsion injuries are catastrophic. They result in permanent paralysis of the arm or hand. The arm may hang limp, with no sensation or motor control, even if the bones in the arm are perfectly intact.
Legally, these injuries are complicated because they are invisible on standard X-rays. You cannot see nerve pain or paralysis in a photograph. Proving the extent of the damage requires electromyography (EMG) and nerve conduction studies.
These injuries are expensive in terms of life-care planning. A paralyzed arm may require adaptive equipment for your home, vocational retraining if you work with your hands, and decades of pain management.
Discuss Your Injury Claim TodayThe Financial Injury: New Jersey's Lack of PIP for Riders
While physical injuries heal, the financial damage of a motorcycle crash is sometimes permanent due to a quirk in New Jersey insurance law. If you drive a car in NJ, your policy likely includes Personal Injury Protection (PIP), which pays your medical bills regardless of fault.
Standard New Jersey motorcycle policies rarely include PIP coverage for medical bills. They offer coverage for the bike and liability for others, but generally exclude the rider's own medical treatment.
This shocks most riders. They wake up in the hospital assuming their auto insurance covers them. It usually does not. Consequently, medical bills fall to your private health insurance.
The Health Insurance Lien
When your private health insurance pays for accident-related treatment, a process called subrogation begins. Your health insurer is effectively loaning you the money for treatment. If you win a settlement from the at-fault driver, your health insurer has a legal right to be paid back from that money.
This creates a scenario where a large settlement is eaten up by medical liens. Part of our role at Onal Injury Law is negotiating these liens. We work to reduce the amount you owe the health insurer so that more of the settlement stays in your pocket.
The Verbal Threshold
You may also face the Limitation on Lawsuit (Verbal Threshold) hurdle. If you selected this option on your private car insurance to save money on premiums, insurance carriers may argue it applies to your motorcycle accident , restricting your right to sue for pain and suffering unless the injury is permanent.
Whether this applies to you depends on complicated interactions between your car policy, your bike policy, and household coverage. Do not assume you are barred from suing until a lawyer reviews the specific declarations pages of your policies.
How Comparative Negligence Affects Injury Claims
New Jersey operates under a modified comparative negligence system. Simply put, you can only recover compensation if you are less than 51% at fault for the accident.
- If you are 50% at fault, your award is reduced by half.
- If you are 51% at fault, you get nothing.
This rule incentivizes insurance adjusters to shift blame onto you. They frequently use your injuries as evidence of your negligence. For example, if you have severe road rash or a catastrophic fracture, they may argue, "The severity of the injury suggests he was speeding."
This is a flawed argument. A rider can suffer fatal injuries at 30 mph. High-severity injuries do not prove high-speed negligence.
To counter this, we use Event Data Recorders (black boxes) and forensic accident reconstruction. We focus on objective data (skid marks, video footage, and vehicle telemetry) to ensure the 51% bar is not used unjustly against you.
FAQ for New Jersey Motorcycle Injuries
Can I still claim injury compensation if I wasn't wearing a helmet in New Jersey?
Yes, you can still file a claim. However, the defense may argue that your failure to wear a helmet—which is a violation of N.J.S.A. 39:3-76.7—worsened your injuries. This could reduce your compensation for head or neck injuries, but it typically does not apply to unrelated injuries like a broken leg or road rash.
Who pays my medical bills if motorcycle insurance doesn't have PIP?
In most New Jersey cases, your primary health insurance pays the bills. If you do not have health insurance, the situation becomes urgent. We may look to MedPay coverage on your bike policy (if you purchased it) or negotiate letters of protection with medical providers to delay billing until the case settles.
Does the Verbal Threshold apply to motorcycle accidents?
It depends on the specific insurance policy and the vehicles involved. While pedestrians and car passengers are frequently subject to strict thresholds, motorcycle claims sometimes fall outside these restrictions. We need to review your specific declarations page to give a definitive answer.
Is lane splitting legal in New Jersey, and does it affect my injury claim?
Lane splitting is not explicitly legal in New Jersey. If you were lane splitting at the time of the crash, insurance adjusters will almost certainly argue you were partially or mostly at fault. This jeopardizes your claim under the 51% comparative negligence rule.
What if the police report says I was speeding?
A police report is hearsay, not a final verdict. Officers at the scene frequently guess speed based on witness statements or the severity of the damage. We look for objective data—skid marks, surveillance video, and biological mechanic analysis—to challenge subjective police reports.
Do Not Let Bias Determine the Value of Your Recovery
Insurance companies maintain teams of adjusters and software designed to minimize payouts. They are simply doing their business to protect their bottom line. You need someone who understands the medical reality of motorcycle trauma to ensure the system treats you fairly.
Call 201 335 6788 to start the investigation. We will secure the evidence needed to prove not just how the crash happened, but exactly how it has changed your life. There is no cost to talk to us, and we only get paid if we recover funds for you.
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