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City Guide · Oregon

Personal Injury Claims in Portland, OR

Population

652,000

Avg. Verdict Range

$35,000 – $350,000

Portland is the Pacific Northwest's second-largest city, known for its progressive transportation culture with extensive cycling infrastructure, light rail, and pedestrian zones. This creates a unique injury landscape where bicycle and pedestrian accidents are common alongside traditional vehicle collision claims. Oregon's modified comparative fault rule and absence of damages caps provide a favorable environment for injured plaintiffs. Multnomah County courts are experienced with the full range of personal injury claims, and Portland attorneys are particularly skilled in bicycle accident and transit injury litigation.

Where Personal Injury Cases Are Filed in Portland

1

Multnomah County Circuit Court

State Trial Court

2

US District Court, District of Oregon

Federal Court

3

Oregon Court of Appeals

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.

Oregon Fault Rules — What This Means for Your Claim

Oregon follows a modified comparative fault rule with a 51% bar, allowing plaintiffs at 50% or less fault to recover with proportional reduction. Oregon does not cap compensatory damages in personal injury cases. The statute of limitations for personal injury in Oregon is two years. Portland's active cycling culture and pedestrian-heavy downtown create elevated injury exposure for non-motorized road users, and courts here are familiar with bicycle and pedestrian accident litigation.

Read the full Oregon personal injury law guide →

Average Verdict Range in Portland

$35,000

General personal injury verdicts in Portland typically range from $35,000 – $350,000. 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 Oregon?

Oregon Personal Injury Law Guide →

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