Burn Injury Lawyer Phoenix, AZ
Severe burns don't just heal and fade away. Medical bills for serious burn cases reach six figures or more.
For over a decade, founding attorney Justin L. Wyatt has represented burn survivors facing some of the hardest recoveries imaginable. Our Phoenix, AZ burn injury lawyer builds cases that capture the full picture of what happened, who is liable, and the total compensation you are owed for the pain you have endured. Consultations are free and we never charge legal fees unless we win.
Why Choose Wyatt Injury Law Personal Injury Attorneys for Burn Injury Cases in Phoenix, AZ?
Burns Are Not Like Other Injuries
Most injuries have an endpoint where treatment wraps up and life resumes. Burns operate differently because third-degree burns destroy skin entirely and require surgical replacement. Fourth-degree burns extend into muscle and bone, and recovery timelines stretch across years. When burns cover a significant percentage of the body, patients may spend months in intensive care at specialized burn centers before even starting rehabilitation.
The American Burn Association tracks these injuries closely. What their data shows is that burn treatment costs dwarf most other injury categories, and the psychological burden of living with severe scarring persists indefinitely. Early settlement offers from insurance companies almost never account for treatment needs that will continue accumulating over the next decade.
Justin Wyatt graduated from the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law at Arizona State University and practices in all Arizona courts plus the U.S. District Court for Arizona. He holds memberships in the Arizona State Bar, the Maricopa County Bar Association, the American Bar Association, and the Arizona Trial Lawyers Association.
Working with a personal injury attorney in Phoenix, AZ who has handled burn cases means having someone who won't push for a quick settlement that leaves you paying out of pocket for surgeries three years from now.
Results That Show We Mean It
Wyatt Injury Law Personal Injury Attorneys has recovered millions of dollars for injury clients across Arizona. Justin's Top 10 Jury Verdict in 2021 tells insurance adjusters something important: this attorney will actually try a case if the offer isn't fair.
Burn defendants often include corporations, property management companies, and manufacturers with serious legal firepower. What they offer depends partly on whether they think your lawyer has won against opponents like them before.
We Stay in Touch
Burn cases take time because treatment takes time. Full damage assessments can't happen until doctors know what reconstruction will require, and that clarity sometimes takes a year or longer. Throughout that wait, you deserve updates on where your case stands.
No Money Upfront
Contingency fee means you pay nothing unless we recover compensation. We take the financial risk while you focus on healing.
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"Justin and his staff are just awesome. They stayed on top of my case and fought for me. Justin always kept me in the loop. He returned my calls and text messages. He made me feel like I wasn't just another client but family. I definitely recommend him to anyone who needs a lawyer." – Tina Corley
Read more reviews on our Google Business Profile.
Types of Burn Injury Cases We Handle in Phoenix
The cause of your burn determines who can be held liable and how your case proceeds.
- Vehicle fires. Collisions involving trucks, motorcycles, and passenger cars can rupture fuel systems or spark electrical fires. Victims trapped in burning vehicles suffer horrific injuries while waiting for extraction. Claims typically target the at-fault driver, though defective components may add manufacturer liability.
- Workplace burns. Construction, manufacturing, food service, and industrial jobs all carry elevated burn risk. Employers who provide inadequate safety equipment, skip required training, or tolerate hazardous conditions can face liability for resulting injuries. Construction accidents involving electrical burns, chemical exposure, or blasts may bring claims against multiple contractors.
- Property owner negligence. Landlords, businesses, and property managers owe duties to keep premises safe. Apartment fires sparked by neglected wiring, restaurant burns from faulty kitchen equipment, injuries from defective heating systems, and similar incidents create premises liability claims against owners who should have prevented the hazard.
- Defective products. Electronics overheat. Appliances malfunction. Batteries in phones and e-bikes catch fire. Product liability law allows injured consumers to pursue manufacturers, distributors, and retailers for burns caused by products that should never have reached the market.
- Chemical exposure. Industrial chemicals and caustic cleaning products cause severe burns on contact. These injuries occur in workplaces that mishandle hazardous materials and in consumer settings where products carry inadequate warnings.
- Electrical contact. High-voltage burns often penetrate deep into tissue, damaging muscle and bone beneath surface wounds that may appear deceptively limited. Construction sites, industrial facilities, and negligently maintained properties all create electrical burn risks.
- Scalding. Hot liquid burns from restaurant accidents, malfunctioning water heaters, and steam exposure cause particular harm to children and elderly victims whose skin is more vulnerable.
- Explosions. Gas leaks, industrial accidents, and defective products cause blasts that combine severe burns with traumatic injury. These catastrophic cases typically involve complex liability and multiple defendants.
Arizona Legal Requirements for Burn Injury Cases
Time Limits Matter
Arizona's statute of limitations under A.R.S. § 12-542 gives you two years from the injury date to file a lawsuit. Miss that deadline and your claim is dismissed regardless of how badly you were burned or how obvious the defendant's fault may be.
Two years feels like plenty of time until you consider that burn treatment often dominates the first year entirely, investigation to identify all responsible parties takes months, and calculating future damages requires waiting until doctors can project long-term needs. Starting the legal process early protects your options even if settlement happens without a trial.
Product Claims Have Special Rules
Defective product cases allow strict liability against manufacturers for design flaws that make products unreasonably dangerous, manufacturing defects affecting specific units, and failure to warn about known hazards. Arizona's statute of repose under A.R.S. § 12-551 cuts off product claims 12 years after the first sale, which matters for burns caused by older appliances or equipment.
Workers' Comp Doesn't Cover Everything
Job-related burns typically qualify for workers' compensation benefits regardless of who was at fault. But workers' comp doesn't include pain and suffering, and benefit caps often fall short of actual losses. When someone besides your employer caused the burn, such as a subcontractor, equipment maker, or property owner, a third-party claim can recover damages beyond what workers' comp provides.
Shared Fault Reduces But Doesn't Eliminate Recovery
Arizona's pure comparative negligence under A.R.S. § 12-2505 means your damages decrease by whatever fault percentage the jury assigns to you, but you still collect the remaining amount. Defendants love arguing that burn victims contributed to their injuries by reacting slowly or ignoring warnings. These arguments reduce awards but don't destroy claims.
Government Defendants Have Tight Deadlines
Burns caused by government negligence, such as fires at public buildings or injuries from city vehicle accidents, trigger Arizona's notice of claim statute under A.R.S. § 12-821.01. You get 180 days to file formal notice, and courts enforce this deadline without exception.
What Damages Are Recoverable in Phoenix Burn Injury Cases?
The Bills Add Up Fast
The American Burn Association reports that acute care alone can run hundreds of thousands of dollars for severe burns, and that's before rehabilitation begins.
Then come the ongoing costs, like scar revision surgeries, continued physical therapy to maintain mobility, counseling for depression, anxiety, and trauma, and more. These future expenses must be calculated and included because once you settle, you can't ask for additional compensation.
Lost wages cover income missed during treatment. Permanent injuries that limit what work you can do going forward create claims for lost earning capacity that can extend across decades. A machinist who loses hand function or a sales professional whose facial scarring prevents client-facing work may have lifetime earnings losses reaching into the millions.
Home modifications, transportation to medical appointments, and household assistance for tasks you can no longer perform yourself all count as economic damages too.
Pain Runs Deeper Than Dollars
Pain and suffering often constitutes the largest damage category in severe burn cases. The pain itself is extraordinary, both during initial treatment and through months of healing. Debridement, graft procedures, and daily wound care all involve levels of discomfort that are difficult to convey to juries but very real to survivors.
Psychological harm runs parallel to physical pain. Depression, anxiety, PTSD, social withdrawal, changes in how people respond to your appearance, difficulty looking in mirrors, and avoidance of situations that trigger memories can persist permanently.
When burns prevent activities that used to bring joy, loss of enjoyment of life applies. Disfigurement damages address permanent scarring. Spouses may file consortium claims when injuries affect marriages.
Fatal Burns
When burn injuries kill, Arizona's wrongful death statute lets surviving family members pursue funeral costs, lost financial support, and compensation for lost companionship and guidance.
Understanding what fair compensation actually includes helps you recognize when an insurance offer falls short.
What Steps Should I Take After a Burn Injury?
Actions taken early affect both medical outcomes and legal options.
1. Get to a burn center if injuries are serious. Specialized burn units provide care that most hospitals cannot match. Follow medical instructions exactly and make every follow-up appointment.
2. Document everything you can. Photograph the accident scene, the burn source, any visible hazards, and your injuries. If you physically cannot do this, have someone else capture evidence before anything gets repaired or cleaned up.
3. Report what happened. Tell your employer immediately for workplace burns. Notify landlords for rental property incidents. Report defective products to manufacturers and to the Consumer Product Safety Commission. Fire department reports about cause and origin become critical evidence.
4. Preserve physical evidence. Keep the product that burned you. Save damaged clothing. Don't let anyone alter the accident scene before it's been documented thoroughly.
5. Get witness information. People who saw what happened or knew about dangerous conditions should be identified while memories remain fresh and contact details stay current.
6. Maintain records obsessively. Medical records, bills, incident reports, insurance correspondence, notes about how injuries affect your daily life. Keep copies of everything.
7. Reject early settlement offers. Insurance adjusters approach burn victims quickly, hoping to settle before the true scope of injury becomes clear. A number that sounds generous while you're hospitalized often falls catastrophically short of what years of treatment will actually cost.
8. Don't give recorded statements. Adjusters want ammunition to minimize your claim. Decline recorded statements until you've consulted an attorney.
9. Stay off social media. Defense lawyers hunt through accounts looking for anything they can weaponize. A photo of you smiling at a family gathering becomes evidence that your burns aren't really that bad.
10. Contact an attorney quickly. Evidence vanishes. Witnesses relocate. Treatment decisions you make now can affect your claim later. Getting legal help early preserves rights that erode fast.
Burn Injury Statistics in Phoenix
Around 450,000 burn injuries receive medical treatment annually in the United States, and roughly 40,000 of those require hospitalization according to the American Burn Association. About 30,000 injuries are severe enough to need specialized burn center care.
Fire and burn injuries rank among the leading causes of accidental death. The U.S. Fire Administration reports thousands of residential fire deaths each year, with tens of thousands more suffering non-fatal burn injuries. Cooking equipment causes more home fires and fire injuries than any other source according to the National Fire Protection Association.
Workplace burns affect thousands annually. OSHA tracks thermal, chemical, and electrical burns across industries, with food service, manufacturing, construction, and utilities showing the highest rates.
Arizona data from the Arizona Department of Health Services reflects hundreds of burn-related hospitalizations statewide each year, concentrated heavily in the Phoenix metro area.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission monitors product-caused burns. Recent recalls have addressed fire hazards in everything from space heaters to hoverboards to portable chargers.
Child burns remain a serious concern. Scalding from hot liquids is the leading burn cause for children under five according to CDC injury data, and these injuries often happen in kitchens and bathrooms where supervision lapses momentarily.
Phoenix Burn Injury Lawyer FAQs
How long do I have to file a burn injury lawsuit?
Two years from the injury date under Arizona's general statute of limitations. Government claims require notice within 180 days. Product liability claims face a 12-year cutoff from the product's first sale.
Who can I sue for my burn injury?
Depending on circumstances: property owners, employers, contractors, manufacturers, drivers, or any other party whose negligence caused your injury. Many burn cases involve multiple defendants.
What if I was burned at work?
You likely qualify for workers' compensation regardless of fault. If someone other than your employer caused the burn, a third-party claim allows additional recovery for damages that workers' comp doesn't cover, including pain and suffering.
Can I sue over a defective product that caused my burns?
Yes. Arizona product liability law allows claims against manufacturers, distributors, and retailers. You can pursue strict liability without proving negligence if the product was defective.
How much is my burn case worth?
That depends on burn severity, body surface area affected, treatment costs past and future, permanent effects, lost income, and how significantly your life has changed. Severe burns often support substantial verdicts because treatment costs so much and injuries last so long.
Will I have to go to trial?
Most cases settle. But preparing for trial produces better settlements because defendants take claims more seriously when trial is a credible threat.
How long will my case take?
Longer than most injury claims. Doctors often can't project long-term treatment needs until a year or more post-injury, and settling before that assessment risks leaving future costs uncovered. Patience here protects your interests.
Should I take the first settlement offer?
Almost never. Early offers come before anyone knows what your treatment will actually cost. Get a lawyer to evaluate any offer before signing anything.
What if I was partly at fault?
Arizona allows recovery even when you share blame. Your damages get reduced by your fault percentage, but the claim doesn't disappear.
Can I recover compensation for emotional trauma?
Yes. Depression, anxiety, PTSD, and distress from disfigurement are all compensable in Arizona burn cases.
What if the burn victim dies?
Family members may bring wrongful death claims for funeral expenses, lost support, and loss of companionship.
Do I really need an attorney for a burn case?
Burn cases involve complex medical evidence, often multiple defendants, and damages that unfold across years. Insurance companies know this and adjust their tactics accordingly. Professional representation makes a significant difference in outcomes.
What evidence matters most?
Medical records documenting injury severity and treatment. Accident scene photographs and investigation reports. Product information if a defective item caused the burn. Witness statements. Documentation of how injuries affect daily life. Often testimony from medical and engineering specialists as well.
How do I pay medical bills while my case is pending?
Health insurance, workers' compensation for job injuries, medical payment coverage on auto policies, and medical liens where providers wait for settlement payment. The right options depend on your specific situation.
What if the responsible party has limited insurance?
We investigate every potentially liable party because additional defendants may have deeper coverage. Underinsured motorist coverage can also apply in vehicle cases.
Most Dangerous Locations for Burn Injuries in Phoenix
Certain environments create elevated burn risks.
Manufacturing plants, refineries, and chemical processing facilities throughout Phoenix expose workers to thermal, chemical, and electrical hazards. OSHA violations at these sites contribute to preventable injuries.
Construction sites across the rapidly growing metro area involve electrical work, welding, hot roofing, and similar activities that create burn dangers. Overlapping contractors sometimes produce confusion about safety responsibility.
Restaurants and commercial kitchens see burn injuries constantly. Hot surfaces, grease, steam, and scalding liquids combine with time pressure and inadequate training to create risk.
Apartment complexes where owners defer maintenance develop faulty electrical systems, aging wiring, and malfunctioning appliances that start fires.
Vehicle crashes on Phoenix roads occasionally produce fires, particularly in high-speed collisions involving fuel system damage.
What Are Important Local Resources for Phoenix Burn Injury Victims?
Serious burns need specialized care that most hospitals aren't equipped to provide.
Arizona Burn Center at Valleywise Health at 2601 E. Roosevelt Street in Phoenix is the only verified burn center in Arizona. It treats adults and children with burns of all causes and severity levels, providing the comprehensive care that major burns require.
Banner University Medical Center Phoenix offers Level I trauma services and stabilizes burn patients for transfer to specialized care.
Phoenix Children's Hospital provides pediatric burn treatment.
Wyatt Injury Law Personal Injury Attorneys provides this information for reference and does not endorse these facilities.
Contact Wyatt Injury Law Personal Injury Attorneys
Burns cause damage that doesn't end when wounds close. Scarring is permanent. Pain becomes chronic. The psychological weight of living with visible injuries stays with survivors indefinitely. Treatment continues for years, and the costs accumulate long after insurance companies would prefer to close your file.
Wyatt Injury Law Personal Injury Attorneys represents burn injury victims throughout Phoenix. Founding attorney Justin Wyatt brings more than ten years of personal injury experience and understands what burn survivors actually face, both medically and legally.
Consultations are free. Our contingency structure means no attorney fees unless we recover compensation.
Contact us today to discuss your burn injury case.