Compensation ranges, treatment costs, and how Maryland's Contributory Negligence rule affects your Amputation recovery.
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Amputation truck accident settlements in Maryland typically use a 8x–10x damages multiplier. Settlements range from $220K to $12.0M, though severe cases involving surgery or permanent disability can exceed $12.0M. Maryland's Contributory Negligence directly affects your final compensation amount.
| Severity Level | Typical Settlement Range |
|---|---|
| Single Digit or Partial Hand | $220K – $680K |
| Single Upper or Lower Limb | $1.5M – $4.5M |
| Multiple Limbs / Bilateral Lower | $4.0M – $12.0M |
Traumatic amputation — loss of a limb or digit at the crash scene or through surgical amputation following crush injury — is one of the most severe non-fatal outcomes of commercial truck accidents. The mass and force of commercial trucks can pin, crush, or sever limbs, particularly in pedestrian and cyclist strikes, rollover crashes that trap occupants, and underride crashes that destroy vehicle structure around the occupant. Amputation cases involve extraordinary lifetime costs for prosthetics, rehabilitation, and accommodations — and generate among the highest settlement values in personal injury law outside of TBI and spinal cord injury cases.
Typical lifetime treatment cost range: $400K – $6.0M (varies by injury severity, surgical needs, and ongoing care requirements)
The extraordinary mass of commercial trucks makes amputation injuries possible at speeds that would not cause limb loss in passenger-vehicle-only accidents. Underride crashes — where a passenger vehicle slides under the truck trailer — concentrate crushing forces on specific areas of the vehicle, including door frames and A/B/C pillars, which can pin and sever occupant limbs. Truck tire blowout debris strikes at highway speeds have caused traumatic hand and arm amputations to drivers attempting to avoid the debris. Pedestrian and cyclist strikes by commercial trucks have high rates of lower extremity crush and amputation injuries.
Maryland follows contributory negligence — any fault on your part bars all recovery. An attorney may be able to argue this does not apply. This is governed by Maryland Code Annotated, Courts & Judicial Proceedings § 3-1401 (contributory negligence).
Maryland Fault Rule: Contributory Negligence
Under Maryland's contributory negligence doctrine, any fault on your part — even 1% — bars all recovery. For a Amputation case worth $3–8 million, the stakes of the fault determination could not be higher.
Critical Warning: Defense insurers in Maryland are highly incentivized to find any contributing fault on your part. Given the high value of Amputation cases, you should retain an experienced Maryland truck accident attorney before any communication with the carrier or its insurer.
Based on Amputation & Limb Loss economic damages and a 8–10× damages multiplier. Assumes 0% plaintiff fault. Actual amounts vary significantly based on injury severity, treatment needs, and case evidence.
| Injury / Case Profile | Est. Settlement Range |
|---|---|
| Single Digit or Partial Hand | $220K – $680K |
| Single Upper or Lower Limb | $1.5M – $4.5M |
| Multiple Limbs / Bilateral Lower | $4.0M – $12.0M |
Ranges represent 25th–90th percentile of estimated outcomes. Does not account for Maryland fault deductions. Commercial truck policies typically carry $750K–$5M in coverage. High-value cases may require excess coverage claims.
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