Injured in Tulsa? You have two years - and the clock is already running.
Top 10 Personal Injury Lawyers in Tulsa, OK
After a serious injury in Tulsa, a personal injury lawyer costs you nothing up front and is paid only if they win. Oklahoma gives you two years to file, and the insurance company is already working against you. Here are eight Tulsa firms that handle injury claims, each verified against at least two independent sources.
Updated March 01, 202612 min readEditorially independent
The day after a bad wreck, the other driver's insurer may already be calling, friendly and helpful, asking for a recorded statement. That call is not for your benefit. A Tulsa personal injury lawyer takes those conversations off your plate and keeps you from saying something that gets used to cut your claim.
Oklahoma works on contingency for injury cases: no hourly bills, no retainer, and the lawyer is paid a percentage only if they recover for you. Typical fees run about 33% if the case settles before a lawsuit and closer to 40% if the firm has to file and litigate. One thing to watch in Oklahoma: the state follows modified comparative negligence, so if you are found more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing - which is exactly why the insurer wants to pin blame on you.
The eight firms below have verifiable Tulsa injury practices, several with documented verdicts, Super Lawyers recognition, and trial records. We list what each is known for, not a sales pitch.
How we picked these 8: We cross-referenced peer rankings and directories (Best Lawyers, Super Lawyers, Avvo, Martindale-Hubbell, Justia, Expertise.com, FindLaw) and each firm's own published practice pages. Every firm below appeared in at least two independent sources and has a verifiable Tulsa-area personal injury practice. We do not accept payment for placement, and we do not write sponsored reviews. More on our methodology →
1
Graves McLain Injury Lawyers
Tulsa, OKInjury & malpractice firm
Practice focus: Car and truck accidents, serious injury, medical malpractice, wrongful death
Graves McLain is an award-winning Tulsa injury firm at 4137 S. Harvard Avenue handling car wrecks, commercial-truck collisions, serious injury and medical-malpractice claims. The firm works cases on contingency and has recovered millions in verdicts and settlements for Oklahoma clients.
Why they made the list: Top-rated, award-winning Tulsa injury firm appearing on Justia, Super Lawyers and Expertise.com with a published trucking and serious-injury record.
Fee structure
Contingency, typically 33%-40% (no fee unless you recover)
Practice focus: Car accidents, truck wrecks, catastrophic injury, wrongful death
Tulsa injury lawyers Jacob Biby and Patrick Collogan run Biby Law Firm (9810 E. 42nd St., Suite 211). Since 2012 Jacob Biby has obtained more than 70 verdicts and settlements of at least $100,000, has a 10/10 Avvo rating, has been named to Super Lawyers for nine straight years, and is a National Trial Lawyers Top 100 member.
Why they made the list: Documented track record of six-figure-plus results, nine consecutive Super Lawyers selections and a perfect Avvo rating; verified across Super Lawyers and the firm site.
Fee structure
Contingency, typically 33%-40% (no fee unless you recover)
Practice focus: Personal injury, serious accidents, insurance disputes, wrongful death
Managing partner J. Spencer Bryan leads Bryan & Terrill Law, a Tulsa firm dedicated to personal-injury work. Bryan is a member of the National Trial Lawyers Top 100 and has recovered millions of dollars for injured Oklahomans.
Why they made the list: Injury-focused practice with National Trial Lawyers Top 100 recognition; listed on Justia and Super Lawyers for Tulsa personal injury.
Fee structure
Contingency, typically 33%-40% (no fee unless you recover)
Practice focus: Car accidents, personal injury, nursing-home neglect, wrongful death
Carr & Carr Injury Attorneys is a long-running Oklahoma injury firm with a midtown Tulsa office. Its lawyers handle the insurance and litigation work so clients can focus on recovery, across auto-accident, premises and wrongful-death claims.
Why they made the list: Established multi-office Oklahoma injury firm listed in Tulsa personal-injury directories on Justia and Avvo.
Fee structure
Contingency, typically 33%-40% (no fee unless you recover)
Practice focus: Serious personal injury, medical malpractice, product liability, wrongful death
Richardson Richardson Boudreaux is a Tulsa trial firm handling serious personal-injury, malpractice and product-liability litigation. Its attorneys, including Charles 'Chuck' Richardson, are recognized injury litigators in the Tulsa area.
Why they made the list: Established Tulsa injury trial firm with peer-recognized litigators; appears in Tulsa personal-injury directory listings.
Fee structure
Contingency, typically 33%-40% (no fee unless you recover)
Practice focus: Negligence and accident claims, serious injury, wrongful death
Hanson & Holmes represents injured people and their families in Tulsa accident cases caused by another party's negligence, with more than 100 years of combined legal experience among its attorneys.
Why they made the list: Tulsa injury firm with a century of combined experience; listed in area personal-injury directories.
Fee structure
Contingency, typically 33%-40% (no fee unless you recover)
Practice focus: Catastrophic injury, premises liability, dog bites, construction injury, wrongful death
Baysinger, Henson, Reimer & Cresswell has served Tulsa clients for over 25 years, handling criminal-assault injury, dangerous-premises, dog-attack, construction-site and catastrophic-injury and wrongful-death matters.
Why they made the list: More than 25 years of Tulsa injury and litigation work across a broad case mix; listed in Tulsa legal directories.
Fee structure
Contingency, typically 33%-40% (no fee unless you recover)
Practice focus: Severe and complex injury litigation, trial work
Clark Brewster of Brewster & De Angelis is a nationally recognized Tulsa trial lawyer who has been listed in The Best Lawyers in America and Oklahoma Super Lawyers. His practice focuses on severe and complex injury litigation.
Why they made the list: Nationally recognized trial lawyer with Best Lawyers and Oklahoma Super Lawyers listings; established Tulsa litigation firm.
Tell us what happened and how you're hurt. We'll connect you with a Tulsa injury lawyer who handles cases like yours. Free, confidential, no obligation.
How to choose between them in Tulsa
Match the firm to your injury. A fender-bender with soft-tissue injuries is a different case from a truck wreck with a permanent disability. Some firms on this list specialize in catastrophic and trucking cases; others handle the full range. Pick accordingly.
Ask about trial record, not just settlements. Insurers pay fairly when they believe a firm will take the case to a Tulsa County jury. A documented verdict history is leverage even if your case settles.
Get the contingency percentage in writing. Confirm the pre-suit and post-filing percentages and who pays case costs if you lose. Reputable firms put all of it in the engagement letter.
Find out who handles your file. At some volume firms you meet a senior lawyer at intake and never see them again. Ask who actually works your case and how often you will hear from them.
Mind the comparative-fault trap. Because Oklahoma bars recovery if you are over 50% at fault, you want a firm that takes liability seriously from day one and investigates fast, before evidence disappears.
What personal injury help typically costs in Tulsa
Personal injury in Tulsa is contingency work, so the cost structure is straightforward:
No fee unless you win. No retainer and no hourly billing. The firm is paid only out of a settlement or verdict.
Pre-suit vs. filed. Fees commonly run about 33% if the case settles before a lawsuit is filed and around 40% if the firm must file suit and litigate.
Case costs are advanced. The firm fronts records, accident reconstruction, and expert fees, then recovers them from the settlement. Ask how costs are handled if there is no recovery.
Medical bills and liens. Part of the lawyer's job is negotiating down medical liens so more of the settlement reaches you. Ask how they handle this.
Free case review. Every firm here will evaluate your case at no charge before you commit to anything.
Because the firm only gets paid if you do, injury lawyers are selective about which cases they take. A firm that takes your case is telling you it believes the claim has real value.
How long it takes
How long a Tulsa injury case takes depends mostly on your medical recovery and whether a lawsuit is needed:
Treatment to maximum improvement (varies). Your lawyer usually waits until you have finished treating or reached a stable point, so the claim reflects the full extent of your injuries.
Demand and negotiation (1-4 months). The firm assembles your records and bills, sends a demand to the insurer, and negotiates. Many clear-liability cases resolve here.
Filing suit (if needed). If the insurer will not pay fairly, the firm files in Tulsa County District Court. Remember Oklahoma's two-year filing deadline.
Litigation and resolution (1-2 years). Discovery, depositions, and mediation follow. Most filed cases settle before trial; those that do not are tried to a jury.
Red flags to watch for when hiring a personal injury lawyer in Tulsa
Guaranteed outcomes. No ethical attorney can promise a specific result. If a firm guarantees a win, a number, or a court ruling, walk away.
The disappearing senior partner. You meet a named partner at intake, then never hear from them again while an unsupervised junior runs the file. Ask in writing who handles your matter day to day.
Pressure to sign on the spot. Reputable firms give you the engagement letter in writing and time to read it. High-pressure intake is a volume-mill signal.
No verifiable track record. Look for named results, peer rankings, board certifications, or bar recognition — not "we have helped thousands of clients."
Vague fees. Every legitimate firm will put the fee structure, what is covered, and what triggers extra charges in a written engagement letter.
10 questions to ask in your free consultation
Most of the firms on this list offer a free or low-cost initial call. Use it. Bring a written list and write down the answers, then compare across two or three firms before you sign anything.
Who, specifically, will handle my matter day to day? Get a name and a direct email, not just the firm.
How many matters like mine have you handled in the last three years? You want a number, not a brochure line.
What is your fee, and what does it cover? Get the structure in writing before you sign.
What out-of-pocket costs am I responsible for, and when? Filing fees, records, and experts add up - ask now.
What is the realistic range of outcomes? A good lawyer gives a range; a weak one promises the high end.
How long will this take? An honest estimate, with the assumptions stated.
What is my deadline, and is it at risk? Many personal injury matters carry hard filing deadlines.
How often will I hear from you? Set the communication cadence now.
What can I do to help my own case? The best lawyers will give you homework.
What is the worst-case outcome? A lawyer who refuses to discuss downside risk is selling you something.
What to bring to your Tulsa consultation
You will get more out of the first call if you arrive organized. For most personal injury matters, gather:
A short written timeline. Dates, names, and what happened, in order.
The key documents. Any contracts, letters, agreements, court orders, or filings you have received.
Your correspondence. Relevant emails, texts, or messages - and do not delete anything.
Any deadlines you know about. A court date, a signing deadline, or an agency notice.
Your questions. The 10 above are a good place to start.
If you are not sure whether something is relevant, bring it anyway. It is easier for a lawyer to set aside what does not matter than to chase down what you left at home.
Is hiring a personal injury lawyer in Tulsa worth it?
For small, simple matters you may not need a lawyer at all, and a good one will tell you so. But the moment real money, your record, your family, or a hard deadline is involved, going without representation usually costs more than it saves. The other side — an insurer, a prosecutor, or an opposing party — almost always has a lawyer. You should not be the only person in the room without one.
Here is a simple test. If the outcome could change your finances for years, affect your children, put your freedom or immigration status at risk, or turn on a legal deadline you do not fully understand, talk to a lawyer before you act. Most of the firms above will give you an honest read in a free call, including telling you when you do not need to hire anyone at all.
The cost of a consultation is almost always lower than the cost of a mistake you cannot undo. Even if you decide to handle the matter yourself, one conversation with an experienced Tulsa attorney can tell you what to watch for and where the real risks are before they become expensive.
Talk to a vetted Personal Injury attorney in Tulsa
Tell us about your situation. We'll match you with one of these firms or a similar one. Free, confidential, no obligation.
Frequently asked questions about personal injury lawyers in Tulsa
How much does a personal injury lawyer cost in Tulsa?
Nothing up front. Injury lawyers work on contingency - commonly about 33% of the recovery if the case settles before a lawsuit and around 40% if they have to file suit. If they recover nothing, you owe no fee.
How long do I have to file an injury claim in Oklahoma?
Generally two years from the date of the injury. There are exceptions, but waiting is risky - evidence disappears and witnesses' memories fade. Talk to a lawyer well before the deadline.
What if the accident was partly my fault?
Oklahoma uses modified comparative negligence. You can still recover if you are 50% or less at fault, but your award is reduced by your share - and if you are more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing.
Should I give the insurance company a recorded statement?
Talk to a lawyer first. Adjusters use recorded statements to find reasons to reduce or deny claims. You are generally not required to give the other driver's insurer a statement.
How much is my case worth?
It depends on your injuries, medical bills, lost income, and how clear the other side's fault is. Be skeptical of any lawyer who promises a specific number at the first meeting.
What if the at-fault driver had no insurance?
You may be able to recover through your own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage. A Tulsa injury lawyer can check your policy and pursue that claim.
Do most injury cases go to trial?
No. Most settle. But hiring a firm with a real trial record matters, because insurers pay more when they believe the lawyer will actually try the case.
How soon should I call a lawyer?
As soon as you can. Early investigation preserves evidence like vehicle data and surveillance video, and it keeps you from making mistakes with the insurer that hurt your claim later.
One last thing. Choosing a lawyer is personal. Read the reviews. Call two or three firms before you sign. Ask each one: How many matters like mine have you handled in the last three years? The answer tells you a lot. — The LawFirmSquare team
LawFirmSquare is a directory. We do not represent clients or refer cases for a fee.
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