We handle a variety of personal injury cases in Orlando, including:
Car Accidents
We represent drivers and passengers hurt in collisions on Orange Blossom Trail, International Drive, and the I-4 corridor, investigating the crash and pursuing the insurers for the full value of the injury.
Truck Accidents
We handle collisions with commercial trucks moving along I-4 and SR 528 (the Beachline), where the injuries and the carriers’ defense are both heavier and require aggressive litigation.
Motorcycle Accidents
We pursue claims for riders struck on SR 408 and the interstate ramps, establishing the other driver’s liability and recovering for the severe injuries motorcyclists routinely suffer.
Pedestrian Accidents
We represent pedestrians struck along International Drive and Orange Blossom Trail, investigating right-of-way and visibility to establish liability and negotiate with the driver’s insurer.
Bus Accidents
We handle crashes involving transit and tour buses on International Drive and Orlando’s tourist corridors, identifying the responsible operator and pursuing the carrier for our client’s injuries.
Rear-End Collisions
We handle the rear-end crashes that fill stop-and-go I-4 and SR 408 traffic, documenting fault and the spinal and soft-tissue injuries that follow.
How we handle your Orlando injury case
01
Detailed Investigation
We thoroughly investigate the accident to gather evidence and build a strong case.
02
Expert Negotiation
We negotiate with insurance companies to secure the best possible compensation
03
Continuous Support
We guide you through the entire legal process, from filing a claim to achieving a resolution
We provide personalized legal solutions
Extensive experience
Our team has extensive experience handling a wide range of legal cases in Orlando
Successful results
We are proud of our successful case outcomes and the trust our clients place in us
Multilingual support
We offer services in Russian, Ukrainian, Spanish, French, and English to better serve our diverse community
Direct attorney access
You work directly with your attorney and can reach us when you need updates or answers
Free case evaluation
Our lawyers will contact you for a brief consultation and explain what steps can be taken
Need to contact us immediately?
Call 239-995-3425 or email us at leo@99legal.com
Types of compensation you may be entitled to
Medical Expenses
The compensation is based on the actual cost of medical treatment. The value ranges from a few thousand dollars for minor injuries to hundreds of thousands for severe, long-term injuries requiring extensive treatment.
Medical expenses are usually challenging to prove, but issues likely arise if treatment was delayed or not well-documented.
Future Medical Care
Future Medical Needs compensation covers the anticipated cost of ongoing or long-term medical treatment required after a car accident. This includes expenses related to rehabilitation, surgeries, therapy, or lifetime care for permanent disabilities. Settlement values typically range from $50,000 to several million dollars, depending on the severity of the injuries and the expected duration of care.
This type of compensation carries a high level of risk, as it depends heavily on expert medical testimony to accurately forecast future health conditions and related expenses.
Loss of Earning Capacity
Loss of Earning Capacity refers to compensation for the reduced ability to earn income in the future due to accident-related injuries or disabilities. The amount is estimated based on projected lost wages over the person’s remaining working years and can vary from tens of thousands to several million dollars, depending on factors such as age, occupation, education, and injury severity.
Proving this type of loss is complex, requiring detailed evidence of prior earnings, career trajectory, and expert economic analysis to clearly link the injury to diminished earning potential.
Vehicle Damage
Vehicle Damage compensation covers the cost to repair or replace a vehicle damaged in a car accident. The claim may include the cost to restore the car to its pre-accident condition or the fair market value if it is declared a total loss. The settlement amount depends on the vehicle’s age, make, model, mileage, pre-accident condition, and repair costs. Minor damages usually cost $500–$5,000 to fix, while severe damage or total loss can range from $10,000 to $100,000 or more, especially for newer or luxury cars.
Insurance adjusters or auto appraisers typically determine the final amount. Proving vehicle damage is usually straightforward with photos and repair estimates, though disputes can arise over pre-existing issues, depreciation, or total loss valuation.
Physical Pain
Physical Pain compensation addresses the physical suffering and discomfort caused by injuries sustained in an accident. It includes both immediate pain following the crash and ongoing pain experienced during recovery. The value is often calculated using a multiplier method, where medical expenses and other quantifiable damages are multiplied by a factor—typically between 1.5 and 5—based on the severity and duration of the pain.
Pain and suffering damages are inherently subjective, requiring comprehensive medical documentation, doctor testimony, and sometimes personal pain journals. The challenge lies in proving the lasting impact of the pain, especially if visible injuries appear healed or documentation is incomplete.
Frequently asked questions
How long do I have to file an injury claim in Orlando?
Florida now allows two years from the date of injury, a deadline shortened by the 2023 HB 837 reform. Because evidence on Orlando’s busy corridors fades quickly and visiting witnesses leave the state, contacting Kremenchuker Law Group early protects your claim and the proof it depends on before the deadline passes.
Do I have to use my own insurance after an Orlando crash?
Yes. Florida’s no-fault system means your Personal Injury Protection coverage pays initial medical bills regardless of fault, but treatment must begin within 14 days. Kremenchuker Law Group helps you meet that requirement and, for serious injuries, pursues the at-fault driver for damages PIP does not cover.
What if I was partly at fault for the accident?
Florida applies modified comparative negligence with a 51% bar, so if you are more than half at fault you recover nothing; otherwise your recovery is reduced by your share. Kremenchuker Law Group investigates the crash and builds the evidence that establishes the other driver’s liability and protects your recovery in Orange County.
Can Kremenchuker Law Group help after a bus or tour-bus accident?
Yes. Kremenchuker Law Group handles crashes involving transit and tour buses on International Drive and other Orlando corridors. We identify the responsible operator, establish liability, and pursue the carrier and its insurer for the full extent of our client’s injuries.
What does it cost to hire Kremenchuker Law Group?
Kremenchuker Law Group handles Orlando injury claims on contingency — no fee unless we win. You pay nothing upfront, and the firm is paid only if it recovers compensation for you, giving injured Orange County residents and visitors access to experienced representation regardless of their finances.
Don’t delay — time is limited
Under Florida law, you have two years to file a personal injury claim. Missing the deadline can mean losing your right to full recovery.
Our practice areas serving Orlando
Personal Injury Attorney in Orlando
I-4 cuts straight through the middle of Orlando, and the toll roads — SR-408, SR-417, and the Beachline (SR-528) — pour millions of tourists and commuters onto roads they don’t know. When that mix turns into a crash, Kremenchuker Law Group represents injured people across Orange County. We investigate the wreck, deal with the insurer, and litigate in the 9th Judicial Circuit when the offer isn’t fair, handling car accident, truck accident, motorcycle, pedestrian, bicycle, and rear-end claims.
How long you have to file after an Orange County crash
The deadline is tighter than most people realize. Florida’s 2023 HB 837 reform cut the personal-injury limitations period to two years under Fla. Stat. § 95.11, and missing it almost always ends a case outright. Orlando adds a second urgency: with so many visitors involved in local crashes, witnesses leave the state within days. Acting quickly lets us capture their statements, the Orange County crash report, and any I-4 or SR-408 camera footage before it’s gone.
What an Orlando injury claim is worth
The insurer’s first offer rarely reflects the real cost of a serious injury. A full Orange County claim accounts for emergency and ongoing medical bills, the future care a physician projects, lost wages and reduced earning capacity, vehicle and property damage, and the pain and diminished quality of life that no receipt captures. The value turns on how severe the injury is and how thoroughly it’s documented. As your personal injury attorney, we tie every loss to clear liability so nothing is left on the table.
Florida no-fault and the 14-day treatment rule
Florida is a no-fault state, so your own Personal Injury Protection responds first after an Orlando crash — but only if you’re treated within 14 days. PIP then pays 80% of medical costs and 60% of lost wages up to its $10,000 cap. To pursue the at-fault driver for full pain-and-suffering damages, your injury must meet the serious-injury threshold of § 627.736. Building the medical record that satisfies that threshold is something we start on from the first consultation.
When the insurer pins the blame on you
Expect the carrier to argue you were partly responsible — it directly lowers the payout. Under § 768.81, anyone more than 50% at fault recovers nothing, and a smaller share still reduces the award proportionally. Orlando insurers use this rule aggressively, especially when a tourist or rideshare driver is involved and the facts are murky. We respond with an independent investigation — photos, the crash report, witness accounts, and reconstruction where needed — so fault is set by evidence, not the adjuster.
Orlando’s most dangerous roads
Some corridors produce far more injury crashes than others. We routinely handle wrecks on I-4, consistently ranked among the deadliest interstates in the country; on the SR-408 and SR-417 toll roads, where unfamiliar drivers merge at speed; and on surface arteries like Orange Blossom Trail (US-441), Colonial Drive (SR-50), and John Young Parkway, where turning traffic and pedestrians raise the risk. Each location leaves its own evidence, and we investigate every crash according to the specific Orange County roadway involved.
Why prompt medical care protects your case
Fast treatment does double duty: it safeguards your health and it documents your injuries while the connection to the crash is undeniable. After an Orlando collision, get checked at Orlando Health’s ORMC, AdventHealth Orlando, or an urgent-care clinic, even if you only feel sore — adrenaline can hide serious injuries for a day or more. Keep every bill and follow-up record. That trail, begun inside Florida’s 14-day PIP window, often decides whether the insurer takes your claim seriously.
Your checklist after an Orlando crash
A few early moves protect your claim. Get medical care and make sure the crash is reported to Orlando PD or the Orange County Sheriff. Photograph the vehicles, the scene, and your injuries. Exchange insurance details, but don’t give the at-fault driver’s insurer a recorded statement before you have a lawyer — those calls are built to extract damaging admissions. Per FLHSMV data, early documentation strengthens a claim. When you’re ready, contact Kremenchuker Law Group for a free Orlando review — no fee unless we win.



