If you’ve been searching for information about comparative negligence in Louisiana car accident cases, you may have found articles saying Louisiana allows you to recover money even if you were mostly at fault. That information is outdated. Louisiana law changed on January 1, 2026 — and the new rules could make or break your personal injury case.
Murphy Law Firm has been helping injury victims throughout Louisiana since 1993. Our experienced attorneys understand Louisiana’s comparative fault law inside and out — including every change that took effect in 2026. Call us at (225) 928-8800 o complete the short form on our contact page to schedule a free case evaluation. No upfront cost and no fee unless we win.
You may see the terms “comparative negligence” and “comparative fault” used interchangeably. In Louisiana, the correct legal term is culpa comparativa — but both phrases mean the same thing. They describe the system Louisiana uses to divide responsibility when more than one person contributed to causing a car accident.
Under Louisiana’s comparative fault law, a jury or insurance adjuster looks at the share of fault each party carries. That fault percentage then determines how much compensation each injured person can recover — or whether they can recover anything at all.
Before January 1, 2026, Louisiana followed a pure comparative fault system under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2323. Under pure comparative negligence, an injured person could recover money no matter how much fault they carried. The total damages were simply reduced by their fault percentage.
Here is how fault percentages worked under the old pure comparative fault system:
Under pure comparative negligence, there was no cutoff. No matter how responsible you were for your own accident, you could still get some payout. That system is gone.
Effective January 1, 2026, Louisiana Civil Code Article 2323 was amended to adopt a modified comparative fault system with a 51% bar. The new comparative negligence rule works like this:
This single change to Louisiana’s comparative fault rules is the most significant reform to personal injury law in the state in decades. Under the old pure comparative negligence system, a person who was 70% at fault could still recover 30% of their damages. Under the new modified comparative fault system, that same person recovers zero.
Example 1 — Simple rear-end collision: You are stopped at a red light, and another driver hits you from behind. They are found 100% at fault. You recover 100% of your medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and other damages. No change from before.
Example 2 — Shared fault accident: You were slightly over the speed limit when another driver ran a stop sign and hit you. A jury finds you 30% at fault and the other driver 70% at fault. Your total damages are $100,000. You recover $70,000 — your total damages reduced by your 30% share of fault.
Example 3 — Majority fault: You were making a left turn when another driver hit you. Insurance adjusters argue you failed to yield. A jury finds you 55% at fault. Under the new comparative negligence rule — you recover nothing. Under the old pure comparative fault system, you would have recovered 45% of your damages. Under the new law, recovery is gone entirely.
Insurance companies and insurance adjusters know the new culpa comparativa rules very well — and they use them aggressively.
Under the old pure comparative negligence system, pushing your fault from 40% to 60% reduced your recovery by 20 percentage points. Under the new modified comparative fault system, pushing you past 51% eliminates your recovery completely. That gives insurance companies a dramatically higher incentive to argue you were primarily responsible for your own accident.
They will review police reports. They will gather medical records. They will interview witnesses. They will hire accident reconstruction experts. All of it is designed to push your fault percentage above 51% and eliminate your right to fair compensation entirely.
This is why having an experienced attorney handling your personal injury claim from day one is more important under the new law than it ever was under pure comparative negligence. The attorney-client relationship begins the moment you call Murphy Law Firm — and from that point, we handle all contact with insurance adjusters on your behalf.
Fault in a Louisiana car accident personal injury case is determined through evidence. Our car accident lawyers gather and analyze:
Informes policiales — the official accident record documenting what law enforcement found at the scene. Traffic citations issued to the other driver are strong evidence of fault.
Medical records and medical expenses — documenting your injuries and connecting them directly to the accident is critical. Medical bills establish the economic value of your claim.
Witness accounts — independent witnesses who saw the accident provide some of the most credible evidence in any fault dispute.
Surveillance and traffic camera footage — video evidence of the accident itself is powerful. We move immediately to preserve footage before it is deleted.
Expert accident reconstruction — in some personal injury cases, we retain experts who can establish exactly how the accident happened using physical evidence and data analysis.
If your degree of fault is 50% or less in your Louisiana car accident personal injury case, you may recover:
Economic damages — medical bills, medical expenses, future medical care, lost wages, loss of future earning capacity, and property damage.
Daños no económicos — pain and suffering, emotional distress, permanent disability, and loss of enjoyment of life.
The full value of a serious personal injury claim is almost always far higher than what an insurance company’s first offer suggests. Never accept a settlement without first getting a case evaluation from an experienced attorney.
Disclaimer: Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome in your case. Every personal injury case is unique and depends on its specific facts and circumstances.
En Louisiana Civil Code Article 3493.1, effective July 1, 2024, you have dos años from the date of your car accident to file a personal injury lawsuit in Louisiana. Missing this deadline permanently eliminates your right to compensation under Louisiana’s comparative fault law — regardless of how strong your case is.
Murphy Law Firm has recovered more than $250 million for Louisiana injury victims — including verdicts of $18.9 million y $13.4 million. Our personal injury attorneys have been navigating Louisiana’s comparative fault law for over 33 years — through every change, including the landmark 2026 reform.
Whether you live in Baton Rouge, the surrounding parishes, or anywhere else in Louisiana, our law firm is ready to fight for fair compensation on your behalf.
We handle all car accident personal injury claims on a contingency fee basis. No upfront costs. No fee unless we win.
Llame a (225) 928-8800 — available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week — or contact us online for your free consultation.
Murphy Law Firm | 2354 S. Acadian Thruway, Baton Rouge, Louisiana | Serving car accident injury victims throughout Louisiana.