Motor vehicle accidents in Arkansas
Arkansas crash volume tracks its two big freight corridors. I-40 cuts east-west across the state through Little Rock, connecting Memphis to Fort Smith and Oklahoma, while I-30 runs southwest toward Texarkana and I-49 links Fort Smith to the fast-growing northwest. Heavy truck traffic on I-40 is a recurring factor in the state's serious-injury collisions.
Little Rock, Fayetteville, Fort Smith, Springdale, and Jonesboro anchor most of the injury caseload. For a firm covering central Arkansas or the northwest corridor, the challenge is speed of contact — the crashes are there.
Arkansas injury law that shapes these cases
Arkansas is an at-fault (tort) state — the at-fault driver's liability insurer covers the harm, with no mandatory no-fault or PIP system to clear first.
Arkansas gives claimants a longer runway than most: the statute of limitations for personal-injury and car-accident claims is three years from the date of the accident (Ark. Code § 16-56-105). The extra year is real breathing room, but early intake still wins the case.
Arkansas applies modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar. A claimant who is less than 50% at fault recovers, reduced by their share; a claimant who is 50% or more at fault recovers nothing. That makes clean liability the difference between a workable file and a dead one.
The minimum auto liability limits are 25/50/25: $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident for bodily injury, plus $25,000 for property damage.
How we screen Arkansas leads
We run our own crash campaigns across central and northwest Arkansas, capture the claimant directly, and qualify every one before it reaches your intake team:
- Recent accident — recent enough to sit comfortably inside the three-year filing window.
- Real injury — the claimant reports an actual injury with damages worth pursuing.
- Not at fault — with a 50% bar, shared fault can eliminate the claim, so we confirm the claimant was not the at-fault driver.
Arkansas advertising & lead-gen compliance
How an Arkansas claimant is reached is governed by the federal TCPA: prior express written consent is required before marketing calls or texts, and revocations must be honored promptly under the FCC's April 2025 rules. The one-to-one consent rule was vacated in January 2025 and no longer applies, but proper consent is still required.
Without a state mini-TCPA on the books, Arkansas layers the Arkansas Bar / Supreme Court attorney-advertising rules on top of the federal baseline — barring false or misleading legal ads and regulating solicitation of accident victims. If a lead was generated through deceptive claims, that exposure follows the firm that buys it.
Kurios captures leads through consent-based advertising, documents that capture, runs compliant landing pages, and makes no outcome guarantees — honoring opt-outs and solicitation windows, one firm per lead. Compliance stays with the campaign, so it never lands on your file. For the authoritative rules behind all of this, see the Arkansas Bar Association’s attorney-advertising rules and the FCC’s TCPA rules on telemarketing and robocalls.
Why Arkansas personal injury firms work with Kurios
The metric that decides whether a source is worth it in Arkansas is cost per signed case — and exclusive, screened, fast leads sign at a rate that keeps that number in range. Every Arkansas lead is exclusive to one firm — never shared, resold, or recycled — and delivered into your CRM (Filevine, Litify, Salesforce, and others) in under 10 seconds so intake reaches the claimant first. No junk, no wrong numbers, no paying for leads that go nowhere. We are MVA-only and start with a 3-month test batch of 50 exclusive leads a month — month-to-month, cancel anytime within the 3 months, no retainer. We generate every lead ourselves — an operator, not an aggregator reselling a shared pool — so cost per signed case is the number you get to prove. See our car accident lead program and the wider MVA lead lineup.
Ready for exclusive MVA leads, delivered to your CRM in under 10 seconds?
See If You QualifyFrequently Asked Questions
What is the statute of limitations for a car accident claim in Arkansas?
Three years from the date of the accident under Ark. Code § 16-56-105 — longer than most states, but early intake still protects the case.
Is Arkansas a no-fault state?
No. Arkansas is an at-fault (tort) state — the at-fault driver's liability insurer pays for the injuries, with no mandatory no-fault or PIP layer.
How does comparative negligence work in Arkansas?
Arkansas uses modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar: recover if you're less than 50% at fault (reduced by your share), nothing at 50% or more.
Are your Arkansas leads exclusive?
Yes. Every Arkansas car accident lead goes to one firm only — never shared, resold, or recycled.
Are Kurios's Arkansas leads TCPA-compliant?
Yes. Our campaigns are consent-based with documented capture, opt-outs are honored, and we make no outcome guarantees. Arkansas has no state mini-TCPA, so the federal TCPA and Arkansas attorney-advertising rules govern. Because a non-compliant lead source can expose the buying firm, we keep capture and disclosures clean.
How fast do Arkansas leads reach my CRM?
In under 10 seconds. Each lead is pushed directly into your CRM in real time so your intake team can call immediately.
