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Pedestrian Accidents in New York City

Justin Khuu

Justin Khuu

Research Editor

David H. Perecman, J.D.

David H. Perecman, J.D.

Legal Reviewer · NY Bar #1453588 ·

Apr 2026 · 8 min read

Zero Up Front. Always.4.9 · 720 Google reviews

CaseCompass.ai is a free legal resource and matching service, not a law firm. Content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.

Accidents move fast. This guide doesn't. Every step below is attorney-reviewed and specific to New York City, New York law — so you don't miss what matters.

💡 Quick Answer

Pedestrians injured by vehicles in NYC have the same right to no-fault PIP benefits as vehicle occupants — even if they have no auto insurance of their own.

  • PIP for pedestrians: File NF-2 within 30 days with the at-fault vehicle's insurer (not your own, since you don't have a car policy). If the vehicle is unidentified, file with MVAIC within 90 days.
  • Serious injury threshold still applies to sue for pain and suffering
  • Pure comparative fault: If a pedestrian was partly at fault (e.g., jaywalking), recovery is reduced but not eliminated
  • Vision Zero: NYC's traffic enforcement initiative targets speeding and failure-to-yield — police reports for pedestrian incidents often include Vision Zero citations that strengthen liability

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New York City saw pedestrian fatalities surge 18% in 2024, with Tillary Street and Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn ranked as the most dangerous pedestrian intersection in all of New York State. NYC's density — millions of people walking near heavy vehicle traffic every day — makes pedestrian accidents a leading cause of serious injury and wrongful death claims in the state.

Why This Matters — And What Insurers Won't Tell You

NYC pedestrian accidents produce some of the highest-value personal injury cases in New York because the injuries are severe — high-speed vehicle vs. unprotected pedestrian almost always meets the serious injury threshold. The evidentiary landscape is also rich: NYC's extensive camera network (red light cameras, speed cameras, CCTV), Vision Zero enforcement reports, and NYPD pedestrian fatality investigations all produce documentation that skilled attorneys use to establish fault and severity.

NYC pedestrian fatalities increased 18% in 2024. Tillary St & Flatbush Ave in Brooklyn is the most dangerous pedestrian intersection in New York State.

Brooklyn (53) and Queens (30) had the highest pedestrian fatality counts in 2024. The intersection of 2nd Ave and East 59th St in Manhattan sees up to 150 accidents per year.

Source: NYPD Traffic Statistics 2024 / NYC Vision Zero Annual Report

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What To Do Next

  1. 1

    Call 911. NYPD investigates pedestrian accidents with a higher priority than standard vehicle crashes — especially if injuries are serious. An NYPD report is essential.

  2. 2

    If able, photograph the scene: crosswalk markings, traffic signals, skid marks, vehicle damage, and your injuries. Ask bystanders for contact information.

  3. 3

    Go to the nearest emergency room — do not refuse treatment. Pedestrian accidents often cause internal injuries that aren't immediately obvious.

  4. 4

    File NF-2 with the at-fault vehicle's insurer (not yours) within 30 days. As a pedestrian without auto insurance, you claim no-fault benefits from the responsible vehicle's carrier.

  5. 5

    Request a copy of any Vision Zero enforcement action tied to your incident — this documentation from NYPD can establish the driver's violation as a basis for negligence per se.

How We Match You with a Verified Firm

Not all law firms are qualified to handle serious injury cases. As shown in our qualification pipeline below, CaseCompass strictly filters incoming cases to ensure you are connected exclusively with a highly-vetted, specialized verified partner firm capable of taking your case to trial if an insurance company refuses to settle fairly.

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How much is your case worth in New York?

Statewide settlement data by injury type, verified by David H. Perecman, J.D..

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Key Numbers

MetricValueSource
NYC pedestrian fatalities (2024)253 total traffic; 18% increase in pedestrian deathsNYPD Traffic Statistics 2024
NY PIP for pedestrians$50,000 — file NF-2 with at-fault vehicle's insurer[NY Insurance Law § 5102](https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/ISC/5102)
NY statute of limitations3 years (CPLR § 214)[CPLR § 214](https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/laws/CVP/214)

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. 1

    Mistake #1: Not knowing where to file the NF-2 as a pedestrian. As a pedestrian without auto insurance, you file NF-2 with the at-fault vehicle's insurer

    not your own. If the vehicle is unknown, file with MVAIC within 90 days. Most pedestrians don't know this and either miss the deadline or file incorrectly.

  2. 2

    Mistake #2: Assuming comparative fault from jaywalking eliminates the claim. NYC pedestrians sometimes don't report accidents because they were jaywalking. New York's pure comparative fault means you can still recover

    your award is reduced by your percentage of fault, not eliminated. Even a pedestrian 50% at fault can recover 50% of their damages.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do I get no-fault benefits as a pedestrian in NYC if I don't have a car?

Yes. NY Insurance Law § 5102 extends PIP benefits to pedestrians injured by motor vehicles. You file NF-2 with the at-fault vehicle's auto insurer within 30 days, not your own (since you don't have a car policy). If the vehicle that hit you is unidentified, file with MVAIC within 90 days.

Can I sue for pain and suffering if I was jaywalking?

Yes, under New York's pure comparative fault system. Jaywalking may reduce your recovery by the percentage you were at fault — but it does not bar your claim. If you were 30% at fault for jaywalking and the driver was 70% at fault for speeding, you recover 70% of your damages.

Sources & Citations

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