
Kyle Amputation Injury Lawyer
Losing a limb changes everything. We work to secure compensation that covers prosthetics, rehabilitation, lost wages, and the emotional toll of amputation injuries.
Kyle is a rapidly growing city along the I-35 corridor south of Austin. With increased development comes more accidents. We represent Kyle residents in personal injury claims.
Serving Kyle
Central Texas
Hays County
No Fee Unless We Win
Free consultation available
24/7 Availability
We’re here when you need us
Amputation Injury Lawyer in Kyle, Texas
If you’ve been injured in a amputation injury incident in Kyle, you need an attorney who understands both the law and the local landscape. Medina & Medina represents clients throughout Central Texas and is familiar with the Hays County court system. Our Kyle team offers free consultations and charges no fee unless we win your case.
How a Kyle-Based Amputation Injury Attorney Changes the Outcome
- Familiarity with Kyle courts, judges, and local legal procedures
- Knowledge of dangerous corridors in Kyle, including I-35 and FM 150
- Established relationships with trusted local medical providers and expert witnesses
- Convenient access for in-person meetings at our office near Kyle
Medina & Medina combines local expertise with proven results across Central Texas. We offer free consultations to every Kyle victim and charge no fee unless we win your case.
Compensation for Amputation Injury Victims in Kyle
Medical Expenses
All treatment costs related to your injury
Lost Income
Wages lost while recovering
Pain & Suffering
Compensation for physical and emotional distress
Future Damages
Long-term care and lost earning capacity
Texas Statute of Limitations
The Texas filing clock for most personal injury claims runs out at two years from the date of injury. Witnesses move, surveillance gets overwritten, and adjuster files harden long before that. Reach us early.
Amputation Injury Cases in Kyle
Amputation Injury cases in Kyle frequently arise along major corridors including I-35, FM 150, FM 1626, Kohlers Crossing. Kyle has a population of over 55,000 residents and was one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States between 2010 and 2020
High-risk areas in Kyle include I-35 through Kyle (heavy congestion during commute hours), FM 150 and I-35 interchange, Kyle Crossing and I-35 frontage roads, FM 1626 corridor to Buda. If you have been injured near any of these locations, our attorneys can help.
- Kyle sits along the I-35 corridor between Austin and San Marcos, making it a major commuter city with heavy daily traffic
- The city has been called "Pie Capital of Texas" and hosts an annual Pie in the Sky festival, reflecting its blend of small-town identity with rapid suburban growth
Understanding Amputation Injury Cases
Common Causes
In Kyle, amputation injury cases often trace back to conditions on I-35 and near I-35 through Kyle (heavy congestion during commute hours). Local drivers and pedestrians encounter these specific risks when navigating these corridors.
- Industrial machinery accidents involving unguarded equipment
- Severe motor vehicle collisions with crush forces
- Construction site accidents with power tools and heavy equipment
- Agricultural equipment entanglement
- Electrocution injuries causing tissue death requiring surgical amputation
- Medical malpractice leading to unnecessary amputation
Typical Injuries
Accident victims in Kyle are typically transported to trauma centers including Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle). The following injuries are common outcomes of these incidents.
- Loss of fingers, hands, or arms
- Loss of toes, feet, or legs
- Phantom limb pain and nerve sensitivity at the amputation site
- Psychological trauma including depression and body image disorders
- Need for lifelong prosthetic devices and replacements
- Loss of independence and need for daily living assistance
Establishing Liability
For amputation injury claims filed in Hays, liability often turns on evidence gathered from specific Kyle locations, including I-35 through Kyle (heavy congestion during commute hours).
Amputation cases often involve employer negligence, machine manufacturer defects, or unsafe premises conditions. Proving liability requires demonstrating that proper safety guards, lockout tagout procedures, or other protective measures could have prevented the amputation. Expert testimony from safety engineers and biomechanical experts helps establish what went wrong and who was responsible for the conditions that caused the catastrophic injury.
Relevant Texas Law
Residents of Kyle pursue these claims under the same Texas statutes that govern all state personal injury actions.
Texas does not cap actual damages in most personal injury cases, which is crucial for amputation victims who face millions of dollars in lifetime prosthetic costs and lost earning capacity. OSHA regulations enforced in Texas require machine guarding under 29 CFR 1910.212, and violations serve as evidence of negligence. Texas workers compensation provides limited benefits for amputations, but third party liability claims allow injured workers to pursue full compensation beyond the workers comp system.
Ready to discuss your case?
Free consultation. No fee unless we win.
Local Resources and Courts in Kyle
Hays County Government Center, 712 S Stagecoach Trail, San Marcos, TX 78666
Kyle falls under Hays County jurisdiction. Personal injury civil cases are filed in the Hays County District Courts in San Marcos.
Nearby Hospitals and Trauma Centers
- Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle)
- St. David's South Austin Medical Center
- Central Texas Medical Center (San Marcos)
Free Case Evaluation
Get a free review of your case in minutes.
Or call now
(512) 883-0012Other Kyle Amputation Injury Practice Areas

Traumatic Brain Injury
Advocating for brain injury survivors

Spinal Cord Injury
Paralysis and spinal injury claims

Wrongful Death
Compassionate wrongful death representation

Burn Injury
Severe burn injury representation

Car Accident
Expert legal help for car crash victims

18-Wheeler Accident
Advocating for trucking accident victims

Truck Accident
Specialized truck accident representation

Motorcycle Accident
Dedicated advocacy for injured riders
More Related Practice Areas and Cities
Kyle Amputation Injury Articles and Resources
Types of Compensation in Texas Personal Injury Cases
Understanding what damages you can recover helps you evaluate settlement offers. Learn about economic and non-economic damages.
Legal GuideWhat Damages Can I Recover in a Texas Personal Injury Case
Texas law allows injured people to recover compensation for a wide range of losses, from medical bills and lost wages to pain and suffering and loss of enjoyment of life. Understanding the categories of damages available to you is essential to knowing what your case is worth.
Legal GuideWhat is Maximum Medical Improvement and Why It Matters
Insurance companies often pressure injured Texans to settle before their doctors have determined the full extent of their injuries. Understanding Maximum Medical Improvement (MMI) is essential to making sure you receive fair compensation for all of your medical needs, both present and future.
Amputation Injury Lawyers Serving Cities Near Kyle
Kyle Amputation Injury FAQs
After an incident near I-35 or I-35 through Kyle (heavy congestion during commute hours) in Kyle, seek immediate medical care at a trauma center such as Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle). Loss of fingers, hands, or arms is a common outcome in these cases and requires prompt evaluation. Preserve evidence at the scene, photograph your injuries and the location, and consult an experienced attorney before speaking with any insurance adjuster.
Civil claims of this type filed in Hays are heard in the county district courts. The primary venue is Hays County Government Center, 712 S Stagecoach Trail, San Marcos, TX 78666. Our attorneys practice regularly in these courts and are familiar with the local procedures and scheduling norms.
Patients with serious injuries in Kyle are typically routed to Ascension Seton Hays (Kyle), St. David's South Austin Medical Center, and Central Texas Medical Center (San Marcos), depending on the nature of the trauma and the time of day. Loss of fingers, hands, or arms, Loss of toes, feet, or legs, and Phantom limb pain and nerve sensitivity at the amputation site are among the diagnoses these facilities see most often in cases like this one. The hospital you start at also shapes the paper trail, so when there is a choice, it is worth knowing which centers carry the specialty teams that match the injury.
The general rule is two years from the date of the injury, under Section 16.003 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. The clock can run on a different schedule when the claimant is a minor, when the injury was not reasonably discoverable until later, or when a government entity is involved, where notice deadlines can fall as early as six months. The cleanest way to know exactly where the clock stands in your case is a short call with a lawyer who can look at the dates.
There is no single cause, but Industrial machinery accidents involving unguarded equipment comes up often enough in the Kyle cases we handle that it is one of the first things we look for. Geographically, I-35 and I-35 through Kyle (heavy congestion during commute hours) are recurring locations, and the conditions specific to those places, road design, traffic volume, lighting, and signage, all factor into liability. We build the evidentiary record with crash reports, witness statements, and any available video before adjusters can lock in their version of events.
Daily familiarity with the courthouse and the community. Our team works Hays matters week in and week out, which means we know the bench at Hays County Government Center, 712 S Stagecoach Trail, San Marcos, TX 78666 on a first-name basis and we know how juries pulled from the broader community tend to read a personal injury case. That continuity affects everything from how we schedule depositions to how we frame opening statements.
Your Kyle Amputation Injury Case Starts With a Conversation
A short, free conversation is all it takes to know where you stand. Our Kyle amputation injury team handles cases on contingency, which means we get paid only when you do.






