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City Guide · Illinois

Personal Injury Claims in Joliet, IL

Population

150,000

Avg. Verdict Range

$40,000 - $310,000

Joliet, a major logistics and rail hub in Will County southwest of Chicago, sits at the crossroads of I-55, I-80, and one of the nation's busiest intermodal freight corridors. Truck and warehouse traffic drive a high rate of commercial-vehicle collisions and forklift or loading-dock injuries. The city's casinos, refineries, and aging industrial sites add premises and workplace claims, while winter ice contributes to slip-and-fall cases. Litigation proceeds in the Will County Circuit Court downtown, with federal matters in the Northern District's Eastern Division. Illinois' modified comparative fault rule allows injured workers and drivers to recover reduced damages when they are 50 percent or less responsible.

Where Personal Injury Cases Are Filed in Joliet

1

Will County Circuit Court (12th Judicial Circuit)

State Trial Court

2

U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division

Federal Court

3

Illinois Appellate Court, Third District

State Appellate Court

Most personal injury cases are filed in state trial court. Federal jurisdiction typically requires diversity of citizenship and damages exceeding $75,000.

Illinois Fault Rules — What This Means for Your Claim

Illinois follows modified comparative negligence with a 51 percent bar to recovery. An injured plaintiff's damages are reduced in proportion to their own fault, and recovery is denied entirely once their share reaches 51 percent or more. The personal injury statute of limitations is generally two years from the date of injury. Illinois does not impose statutory caps on compensatory damages in negligence actions, following the state supreme court's invalidation of prior caps.

Read the full Illinois personal injury law guide →

Average Verdict Range in Joliet

$40,000 - $310,000

General personal injury verdicts in Joliet typically range from $40,000 - $310,000. Actual outcomes depend on injury severity, medical costs, lost income, and the specific facts of each case.

Related Injury Guides

Want to understand all the rules that apply in Illinois?

Illinois Personal Injury Law Guide →

Other Illinois Cities

For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.