Websites for personal injury lawyers — all 50 states
Personal Injury lawyer website design
Someone searching for a personal injury lawyer is usually doing it from a hospital bed, a body shop waiting room, or a kitchen table covered in medical bills. They are hurt, behind on money, and getting daily calls from an insurance adjuster who sounds friendly and is not. In the first five seconds, the site has to answer three things: you handle my kind of accident, you cost nothing up front, and I can talk to a real person right now. Everything else on the page is secondary.
What's actually at stake.
Personal injury is the most expensive corner of legal marketing, and the economics explain why. A single signed motor vehicle case can be worth tens of thousands of dollars in fees, and one catastrophic injury or wrongful death case can carry a firm for a year. That value shows up in the auction: injury-related keywords are consistently among the priciest categories in all of Google Ads, and the organic results are crowded with national settlement firms outspending local lawyers on content. A slow or generic website here does not just look bad. It sends the paid click straight back to the search results, where the next firm's ad is waiting. If you buy traffic in this niche, the website is the one part of the funnel you actually control.
Built for personal injury lawyers
Five things your site gets that a generic build never will.
- 01
Case-type landing pages
Separate, fully built pages for car accidents, truck accidents, motorcycle wrecks, slip and falls, and dog bites. Each one matches what the visitor actually searched, which is what gets the form filled.
- 02
Contingency messaging up front
"No fee unless we win" stated plainly in the hero, near every call button, and on every case page. Injured people assume lawyers are expensive; this single line removes the biggest objection before they scroll.
- 03
Sticky click-to-call with tracking
A persistent call button on mobile wired to a tracking number, so every call is recorded and attributed. Most injury searches happen on a phone, and the call is the conversion.
- 04
Results section built to your bar's rules
Verdicts and settlements displayed with the disclaimers your state requires, such as "results vary" or "prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome." Proof sells, but only if it survives an ethics review.
- 05
Fast ad-ready landing pages
Stripped-down, quick-loading pages purpose-built for Google Ads and LSA traffic. When clicks cost what they cost in PI, page speed and a short form are direct dollars.
How personal injury lawyers get found on Google.
Injury search splits into two streams. The hiring stream is local and urgent: "car accident lawyer near me" and "truck accident attorney [city]." The research stream comes earlier: "how much is my settlement worth" and "should I talk to the insurance adjuster." Local intent is dominant at the hiring moment, so the Google Business Profile and city pages carry real weight. What earns organic rankings is depth: a dedicated page per accident type, injury-specific subpages, and FAQ content that answers the adjuster and settlement questions people ask before they ever call a firm.
Straight answers
Personal Injury attorneys ask us.
How much should a personal injury firm budget for a website?
The build itself costs about the same as in any niche; what changes is everything around it. PI is the most competitive legal market, so plan for more content, more landing pages, and a real ad budget if you want cases in months rather than years. We will tell you the realistic number for your market before you sign anything.
Can you write the case-type pages, or do we have to?
We write them, you review them. Our writers work from your case history and your state's law, then your attorneys mark up anything that is off before it publishes. Most firms spend a couple of hours total on review, not weeks writing.
Are we allowed to publish our verdicts and settlements?
In most states, yes, as long as the figures are accurate and carry the required disclaimer about past results. A few states add stricter conditions, so we build the results section to the advertising rules of your bar specifically. We flag anything that needs your ethics counsel's eyes before launch.
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