ClickCease
Denver skyline. CGH Injury Lawyers represents hit-and-run accident victims across Denver, Colorado.
Denver, Colorado

Denver Hit-and-Run Accident Lawyers Who Find the Recovery When the Driver Fled

When the driver who caused your crash disappears, Colorado law gives you a path to real compensation through your own uninsured motorist coverage. We serve Denver from our office at 2701 Lawrence St. and handle every piece of the claim. No fee unless we win.

No fee unless we win

It's More Than Money.

Get my free hit-and-run case review

100% confidential. No fee unless we win.

Our Denver Office CGH Injury Lawyers 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 Denver, CO 80205 (303) 209-9395 Se habla espanol
5-star rated on Google ABOTA trial advocate on the team Trial lawyers, not a settlement mill 8 attorneys, bilingual EN / ES
  • When a driver flees the scene in Denver, Colorado law treats that driver as uninsured. Your own uninsured motorist (UM) coverage becomes the primary path to compensation, and Colorado requires every auto insurer to offer UM coverage equal to your bodily injury liability limits (C.R.S. 10-4-609).
  • Under C.R.S. 10-4-609(4), buying UM automatically gives you underinsured motorist (UIM) protection as well, and a 2007 amendment that took effect January 1, 2008 allows stacking coverage across multiple vehicles or policies when separate premiums are charged.
  • Colorado runs approximately 220 traffic accidents per day in the Denver region with roughly 5 serious injuries daily per DRCOG data. East Colfax Avenue and Federal Boulevard are CDOT-identified high-crash corridors where hit-and-run crashes are a documented problem.

A hit-and-run crash in Denver leaves you with injuries, a wrecked vehicle, no plate number to chase, and a claims process that most people do not realize points back to their own insurer. CGH Injury Lawyers works from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St. in the RiNo and Cole area, minutes from I-70 and East Colfax Ave. We pull your declarations pages, map every coverage source, build the medical record, and negotiate or litigate until you get what your injuries are worth. You pay nothing unless we win.

Who we represent

Denver hit-and-run victims we represent

Hit-and-run crashes in Denver happen to drivers, passengers, pedestrians, and cyclists. The facts differ, but the coverage analysis and the fight with your insurer are the same. Here is who we take cases for.

Drivers and passengers

  • Rear-ended on I-25, I-70, or I-225 by a driver who pulled into traffic and vanished.
  • Sideswiped on East Colfax Ave or Federal Blvd and could not catch the plate before the driver disappeared.
  • Passengers in a rideshare or private vehicle struck by a fleeing driver.
  • Anyone whose parked vehicle was hit and the at-fault driver left no information.

Pedestrians and cyclists

  • Pedestrians struck at Denver intersections near Union Station, Ball Arena, Coors Field, or Empower Field at Mile High and left without help.
  • Cyclists hit on East Colfax or Federal Blvd, two corridors CDOT identified as the highest-density pedestrian and bike crash hotspots in the Denver metro.
  • Pedestrians struck near the Anschutz Medical Campus at the I-225 and Colfax Ave intersection.
  • Families of people killed in Denver hit-and-run crashes.

If your hit-and-run happened anywhere in Denver County, the case belongs in Denver District Court, 2nd Judicial District. We handle these cases directly from our Denver office, and we know the local rules, local courts, and local insurance defense firms on the other side of these disputes.

Colorado law decoded

How Colorado law turns a hit-and-run into a UM claim against your own insurer

The legal mechanics are not complicated, but they are counterintuitive. A driver who flees becomes, in law, an uninsured driver. That single shift opens your uninsured motorist coverage. Here is how Colorado's framework works.

The UM coverage rule

  • Colorado law requires every auto insurer in the state to offer uninsured motorist coverage equal to your bodily injury liability limits (C.R.S. 10-4-609). Any rejection must be in writing and signed by the named insured to be valid.
  • When a driver flees the scene, Colorado treats that driver as uninsured. Your UM coverage becomes the claim.
  • Under C.R.S. 10-4-609(4), buying UM automatically includes underinsured motorist (UIM) protection. You do not have to ask for both by name.
  • Phantom vehicles, where a driver forces you off the road without making contact and then disappears, may also trigger UM coverage, though corroborating evidence such as a witness or camera footage generally strengthens that claim.

Stacking and policy deadlines

  • If you or a household member insures more than one vehicle, Colorado's stacking rule may let you combine UM/UIM limits. A 2007 amendment to C.R.S. 10-4-609 that took effect January 1, 2008 allows stacking when separate premiums are charged, and insurers can no longer prohibit it by policy language after that date.
  • Whether stacking applies to your specific policy turns on the policy language and your household facts, which is why a coverage review before you file anything matters.
  • Your auto policy may impose a contractual notice deadline shorter than the statutory filing deadline. Missing that notice window can hand the insurer a defense. Calendar your notice deadline at the start of the claim.
  • Colorado UM/UIM claims are governed by C.R.S. 13-80-107.5, the statute the Colorado Supreme Court applied in Pham v. State Farm, 2013 CO 17. The deadline turns on the procedural history of the underlying claim, which is why an early case review is not optional.

Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule

Colorado follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 50 percent bar (C.R.S. 13-21-111). If you are found less than 50 percent at fault, you can recover damages, but your award is reduced by your share of fault. If you are 50 percent or more at fault, you recover nothing. Even in a hit-and-run claim against your own insurer, adjusters routinely try to assign you a share of fault to reduce the payout. Challenging that assignment is central to protecting your recovery.

Economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages are never capped in Colorado. Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is also not capped. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5, at $1.5 million for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, with inflation adjustments starting in 2028.

Local knowledge

Denver roads, courts, and trauma centers where hit-and-run cases land

A Denver hit-and-run case is worked on Denver ground: the crash corridor it happened on, the trauma center that treated you, and the courthouse where your case would be filed. Here is the geography we operate in every day.

High-Crash Corridors

East Colfax Avenue and Federal Boulevard

CDOT identified East Colfax Avenue from Moline Street to Peoria Street as the number one bike and pedestrian crash hotspot in the Denver metro. Federal Boulevard is a CDOT-identified high-density serious-injury and fatal crash corridor and a priority safety corridor. These two streets run through the densest areas of Denver and generate a disproportionate share of hit-and-run injury claims. I-25, I-70, I-225, I-270, and US-36 are the interstate corridors where high-speed hit-and-run crashes produce the most catastrophic injuries.

Event Traffic

Empower Field, Ball Arena, Coors Field, and Union Station

Empower Field at Mile High at 1701 Bryant St holds 76,125 people and generates heavy event traffic on I-25 and the Bryant St corridors. Ball Arena hosts 250 or more events per year steps from Union Station. Coors Field draws Major League Baseball crowds into the Ballpark District. Denver Union Station at Wynkoop St and 18th St is a CDOT-identified dangerous intersection with high pedestrian density year-round. Post-event hit-and-run crashes near these venues are a recurring pattern in Denver injury claims.

Winter Hazards

Snow, Ice, and Black Ice

Denver averages 56.9 inches of snow annually, with measurable snow possible from October 18 through April 28 on average per NWS Boulder data. Black ice and winter precipitation are documented NWS Denver and Boulder hazard categories. Drivers who lose control on icy Denver streets and flee before police arrive are a common source of hit-and-run claims from fall through spring. Documenting road conditions, weather reports, and nearby surveillance cameras in the first 24 hours after a winter hit-and-run is one of the most time-sensitive tasks in the case.

Trauma Care

Denver Health Medical Center and UCHealth

Denver Health Medical Center on Bannock St is the Level I Adult Trauma Center (ACS-verified) and Level II Pediatric Trauma Center (ACS-verified) for the region, operating as the Ernest E. Moore Shock Trauma Center. UCHealth University of Colorado Hospital at the Anschutz Medical Campus in Aurora is a Level I Trauma Center (ACS-verified, CDPHE-designated). Children's Hospital Colorado at the Anschutz Medical Campus is a Level 1 Regional Pediatric Trauma Center. The medical records generated at these facilities document your injuries in the detail a UM claim demands. We work with your treating providers to develop the complete injury picture before any demand goes to the insurer.

Courthouse

Denver District Court, 2nd Judicial District

Personal injury cases that arise in Denver County are filed in Denver District Court, the 2nd Judicial District, with civil matters heard at 1437 Bannock Street, Room 256, Denver, CO 80202. Denver civil procedure, local rules, and the jury pool differ from suburban courts. We handle Denver District Court cases directly. The judges and opposing defense firms either know your attorneys or they do not, and that distinction matters when your case goes past the demand stage.

Why CGH

Why Denver hit-and-run victims choose CGH Injury Lawyers

A real Denver office, trial-ready attorneys, insurance bad-faith experience, bilingual service, and a contingency fee that means we only get paid when you do. We do not publish settlement figures, because every hit-and-run case turns on different coverage, different injuries, and different facts. What we offer is the work and the honesty to tell you exactly where your case stands.

The Coverage

C.R.S. 10-4-609

Colorado requires your insurer to offer UM coverage equal to your liability limits. When the at-fault driver fled, that coverage becomes your claim. We map it, stack it where possible, and fight for every dollar in it.

Real Denver Office

Not a P.O. box.

Our office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 in RiNo is where your attorney works. You can walk in, review the coverage file, and meet the team. We are minutes from the crash corridors where Denver hit-and-run cases originate.

Cases We Turn Down

We say no when the law says no.

If your UM coverage was validly rejected in writing, or if another defense squarely defeats the claim, we will tell you that in the free review rather than open a file and let it stall. You deserve that honesty before you invest any more time.

Bad Faith

We add a bad-faith claim when the insurer earns it.

When your own insurer unreasonably delays or denies a valid UM claim, Colorado's bad-faith statutes (C.R.S. 10-3-1115 and 10-3-1116) give you a separate cause of action. That threat moves carriers off low numbers.

Trial-Ready

8 attorneys, prepared to try your case in Denver District Court.

Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA) and Treasurer of the Colorado Trial Lawyers Association. Timothy G. Tarr has been recognized by Best Lawyers every year since 2023. Insurers respond differently to attorneys who actually go to trial in Denver District Court.

Bilingual

Hablamos espanol.

Spanish-speaking staff and attorneys serve Denver's Spanish-speaking community through every stage of the claim.

No Win, No Fee

Contingency only.

You pay nothing out of pocket for legal fees. We advance costs and collect only from a settlement or verdict in your favor.

Immediately after the crash

What to do after a hit-and-run in Denver

The first hour after a hit-and-run determines how much evidence you will have. Every step below protects the claim that matters later.

  1. Get to safety and call 911

    Move yourself and your vehicle out of traffic if you can do so without worsening injuries. Call 911 immediately. Seriously injured victims near downtown Denver will typically be transported to Denver Health Medical Center, the region's Level I Trauma Center. The police report you generate becomes the foundation of your UM claim, and Denver Police respond to and document crash scenes in Denver County.

  2. Document everything you can recall about the fleeing vehicle

    Write down or dictate to your phone every detail you remember: color, make, model, partial plate, direction of travel, time, and road conditions. Denver has traffic cameras, dashcams on surrounding vehicles, and business security cameras along corridors like East Colfax Ave and near Union Station. Your attorney can move quickly to preserve that footage before it is overwritten, often within 24 to 72 hours.

  3. Identify witnesses

    Ask every bystander for their name and phone number before they leave the scene. Witness accounts of the vehicle, direction, and conduct of the fleeing driver significantly strengthen a UM claim, and they may be the difference between an approved claim and a disputed one when no plate is recovered.

  4. Report promptly to your insurer, but do not give a recorded statement yet

    Your policy almost certainly requires prompt notice of a hit-and-run claim. Report the crash. But do not give a recorded statement or accept any payment before speaking with a lawyer. The same insurer that owes you UM benefits will use anything you say in that call to limit or deny the claim. Call our Denver office first at (303) 209-9395.

  5. We pull every coverage source

    We review your declarations page, confirm your UM and UIM limits, check stacking potential, identify any household policies, and confirm any contractual notice deadlines. We also check whether any third party, such as a property owner, road contractor, or employer, may share liability for the conditions that contributed to the crash.

  6. We build the medical record and demand

    We work with your treating providers at Denver Health, UCHealth, or Children's Hospital Colorado to document every injury, every future cost, and every impairment before a demand goes to the insurer. A demand built on a partial record is the most common reason UM claims settle short of what they are worth.

  7. Negotiate, add bad faith if earned, litigate if necessary

    We negotiate toward a fair settlement. When your insurer unreasonably delays or denies the claim, we add a statutory bad-faith claim under C.R.S. 10-3-1115 and 10-3-1116. When the case does not settle, we file in Denver District Court and present your case to a jury.

Compensation

What a Denver hit-and-run victim can recover through a UM claim

A UM claim can cover the same categories of loss as a direct lawsuit against the at-fault driver, up to your policy limits. Here is what the law allows and where caps apply.

Economic damages (never capped)

  • Emergency care, surgery, and hospitalization at Denver Health, UCHealth, or Children's Hospital Colorado
  • Follow-up treatment, physical therapy, and rehabilitation
  • Future medical costs, including a life-care plan for catastrophic injuries
  • Lost wages from time missed at work
  • Reduced earning capacity when injuries are permanent
  • Property damage to your vehicle
  • All other documented out-of-pocket expenses tied to the crash

Non-economic and physical impairment damages

  • Pain and suffering (capped at $1.5 million for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025 under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5, with inflation adjustments starting in 2028)
  • Emotional distress
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Permanent physical impairment or disfigurement, which is NOT subject to the non-economic cap under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5(5)

The practical ceiling on a UM claim is the aggregate of all UM/UIM limits available from every stacked policy, not a damages cap. If your claim is worth more than those limits, stacking analysis and any third-party liability become critical. That is why a full coverage review at the start of the case, not after the demand, is the most important single step in any Denver hit-and-run claim.

The hard part of these cases

Why your own insurer fights a Denver hit-and-run UM claim

You pay your premium every month. When the person who hurt you flees, you file a claim with your own company. And then the same company that cashed your checks negotiates against you. Understanding why, and what to do about it, is how you stop it.

Tactics we see on Denver UM claims

  • Recorded statements requested as a quick call to open the file, used to lock you into preliminary answers before the medical picture is fully documented.
  • Blanket medical authorizations reaching years into your history, then an argument that your injuries are pre-existing.
  • Low first offers framed as the insurer's best evaluation, sent before the full injury record is compiled.
  • Arguments that you cannot prove the hit-and-run driver actually caused the crash without corroborating evidence, used to dispute the UM trigger entirely.
  • Delay: slow document requests, file reassignments, and silence after a demand is submitted.

When delay or denial becomes bad faith

  • When an insurer unreasonably delays or denies a claim it knows or should know is valid, Colorado gives you a separate statutory cause of action under C.R.S. 10-3-1115 and 10-3-1116.
  • Adding a documented bad-faith claim typically shifts the negotiation dynamic immediately. We document every lowball offer and every unreasonable delay in the file for exactly that purpose.
  • You have cooperation duties under your policy, but those duties do not require you to guess at symptoms, accept a fault assignment in a recorded statement, or settle before the injury is fully understood.
UM claim defenses

Defenses insurers raise on Denver hit-and-run UM claims, and how we answer them

Colorado UM law is not a blank check. Insurers have real defenses available. Knowing what they are and how to counter each one is the difference between a claim that settles and a claim that gets denied.

  1. "You validly rejected UM coverage in writing"

    Under C.R.S. 10-4-609, a rejection of UM coverage must be in writing and signed by the named insured to be valid. Improperly executed rejections have been challenged successfully in Colorado. If there is a rejection on file, we review the actual document and the signatures before accepting the insurer's position that coverage was waived.

  2. "There is no proof another vehicle was involved"

    In a phantom-vehicle case where no physical contact occurred, insurers frequently argue the crash was a single-vehicle accident. Witnesses, traffic camera footage along I-25, I-70, or East Colfax Ave, and physical evidence from the scene can establish that another vehicle was present. This is why preserving evidence in the first 24 to 72 hours is not optional in a Denver hit-and-run case.

  3. "You failed to report promptly"

    Most UM policies require prompt notice of a hit-and-run claim as a condition of coverage. Delay in reporting can give the insurer a defense. We review the policy's notice requirement at the start of the case and document when you reported the crash and to whom, so the insurer cannot use your own cooperation against you.

  4. "Your injuries are pre-existing or unrelated to the crash"

    Insurers pull prior medical records and argue that the conditions they find there, not the crash, caused your current complaints. We work with treating providers at Denver Health, UCHealth, and rehabilitation specialists to document the onset, progression, and causal relationship of your injuries before any demand goes out.

  5. "You were 50 percent or more at fault"

    Under Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111), if the insurer can push your assigned fault to 50 percent or more, you recover nothing. Even in a case where the other driver fled, adjusters may argue you contributed to the crash through speed, lane position, or distraction. We challenge that assignment with the police report, witness accounts, and crash reconstruction where needed.

We will tell you honestly in the free review if a defense squarely defeats your claim. What we do not do is take a case and sit on it while the deadline approaches. If the law is on your side, we fight. If the defenses are real, you hear that at the start, not after months of waiting.

I wish I could leave more than 5 stars!
Grace M., 5-star CGH Injury Lawyers client review
Questions

Denver hit-and-run accident, frequently asked questions

What happens to my insurance claim if the driver who hit me in Denver fled and was never found?

Colorado law treats an unidentified or unlocated fleeing driver as an uninsured driver. That means your uninsured motorist (UM) coverage from your own auto policy becomes the primary vehicle for recovery. Under C.R.S. 10-4-609, every auto insurer in Colorado must offer UM coverage equal to your bodily injury liability limits, and buying UM automatically gives you underinsured motorist (UIM) protection as well (C.R.S. 10-4-609(4)). The claim goes to your own insurer, not the missing driver.

Does my UM coverage pay if the hit-and-run driver was a phantom vehicle that never made contact with my car?

Colorado allows UM recovery in some phantom-vehicle cases, where a driver forces you off the road without physical contact and then disappears. However, these claims are more difficult to prove and generally require corroborating evidence, such as a witness, dashcam footage, or physical evidence from the scene, to establish that a second vehicle was actually involved. The insurer will otherwise argue the crash was a single-vehicle accident. Preserving camera footage along Denver corridors like East Colfax Ave or I-25 within the first 24 to 72 hours is critical.

Can I stack UM coverage from multiple vehicles or policies after a Denver hit-and-run?

Yes, in many cases. A 2007 amendment to C.R.S. 10-4-609 that took effect January 1, 2008 allows stacking of UM/UIM limits across multiple vehicles or policies when separate premiums are charged, and insurers can no longer prohibit stacking by policy language after that date. Whether stacking applies to your specific policies depends on the policy language and your household facts. We pull every declarations page and endorsement at the start of every case because the stacking analysis is one of the most important steps in recovering the full value of a serious hit-and-run claim.

How long do I have to file a hit-and-run UM claim in Colorado?

Colorado UM/UIM claims are governed by C.R.S. 13-80-107.5, the statute the Colorado Supreme Court applied in Pham v. State Farm, 2013 CO 17. The filing deadline turns on the procedural history of the underlying claim, not just the date of the crash, so it is fact-specific. Your auto policy may also impose a shorter contractual notice deadline that can hand the insurer a defense if missed. Get an attorney review early so every deadline specific to your case can be identified and calendared.

Where is a Denver hit-and-run injury lawsuit filed?

Personal injury cases that arise in Denver County are filed in Denver District Court, the 2nd Judicial District, with civil matters heard at 1437 Bannock Street, Room 256, Denver, CO 80202. Most UM claims resolve before a lawsuit is filed, but where the case would go affects local rules, the jury pool, and the defense firms on the other side. We handle Denver District Court cases directly from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201.

Can my insurer deny my hit-and-run claim in bad faith?

Yes. When an insurer unreasonably delays or denies a valid UM claim it knows or should know is covered, Colorado gives you a separate statutory bad-faith cause of action under C.R.S. 10-3-1115 and 10-3-1116. Bad-faith exposure significantly changes the negotiation dynamic with an insurer. We document every delay, every lowball offer, and every instance of unreasonable conduct in the file from the moment we open the case.

What if I am partly at fault for a hit-and-run crash in Denver?

Colorado follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 50 percent bar (C.R.S. 13-21-111). If you are found less than 50 percent at fault, you can still recover damages, but your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are 50 percent or more at fault, you recover nothing. Adjusters routinely try to inflate your share of fault even in a UM claim where the other driver fled. Challenging that assignment with the crash report, witness statements, and where necessary a reconstruction expert is one of the most important things an attorney does on these cases.

Is there a cap on how much I can recover from a Denver hit-and-run UM claim?

The practical ceiling on a UM claim is the aggregate of all available UM and UIM policy limits, including stacked limits where they apply. Within that ceiling, Colorado does not cap economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages. Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is also not capped under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5(5). Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1.5 million for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025 under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5, with lower inflation-adjusted figures for older claims. When the claim value exceeds available UM limits, we investigate whether any third party shares liability for the crash conditions.

It's More Than Money.

The driver fled. You should not have to fight your own insurer alone.

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Available in English and Spanish. Serving Denver from our office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201.

Tell us what happened

100% confidential. No fee unless we win.

Prefer to read first? See how Colorado UM/UIM coverage works statewide.

CGH Injury Lawyers · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205