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Loveland, Colorado with the Rocky Mountain foothills in the background. CGH Injury Lawyers represents injured people across Loveland and Larimer County.
Loveland, Colorado

Loveland Personal Injury Lawyers Who Hold the At-Fault Party Accountable

A serious crash at the I-25 and US-34 interchange, a fall on a Loveland commercial property, or any injury caused by another person's negligence can turn your life upside down. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Loveland office. We serve Loveland and Larimer County from our Denver office, build every claim to its full value, and file in the 8th Judicial District when insurers refuse to be fair. No fee unless we win.

No fee unless we win

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Serving Loveland From Our Denver Office CGH Injury Lawyers 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 Denver, CO 80205 (303) 209-9395 Se habla espanol
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  • CGH Injury Lawyers handles personal injury cases for Loveland residents and visitors: car and motorcycle crashes, premises liability, slip and fall, spinal cord and catastrophic injuries, and wrongful death. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Loveland office. We serve Loveland from our Denver office and come to you.
  • Most car-crash injury claims in Colorado must be filed within three years of the crash (C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n)). Most other injury claims carry a two-year filing deadline (C.R.S. 13-80-102(1)(a)). Claims against a government entity require written notice within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)).
  • A Loveland civil personal-injury lawsuit that exceeds the county-court limit is filed at the Larimer County District Court, 201 LaPorte Ave., Fort Collins, CO 80521, in the 8th Judicial District of Colorado. Loveland shares this courthouse with the rest of Larimer County, including Fort Collins. We handle 8th Judicial District cases directly.

Loveland is a city of approximately 76,000 people in Larimer County, positioned where I-25 meets US-34, one of the most documented crash corridors on the Northern Front Range. UCHealth Medical Center of the Rockies, a Level II Trauma Center located in Loveland, handles the most severe injuries that happen here. When someone else's carelessness causes that harm, CGH Injury Lawyers manages the claim, the negotiation, and the trial. You pay nothing unless we recover for you.

Loveland injury cases we handle

Pick the page that fits what happened to you in Loveland

Each page below covers the Colorado law, the local Loveland facts, and the strategy for that specific kind of claim. Start with the one that matches your situation, or call us and we will point you to the right path.

Crashes

Car Accidents in Loveland

The I-25 and US-34 interchange is one of the most concentrated crash locations on the Northern Front Range. US-287, which runs through Loveland as Eisenhower Boulevard, adds significant arterial collision risk. We pursue the at-fault driver and every available insurance policy after a Loveland crash, from the initial demand through trial at the Larimer County District Court if needed.

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Unsafe Premises

Premises Liability

Property owners in Loveland owe visitors a duty to keep their premises reasonably safe. Broken flooring, poor lighting, inadequate security, and defective stairs at commercial properties, apartment complexes, and retail centers produce serious injuries. We identify every responsible party and the insurance behind them, and we press the claim at every stage under Colorado's premises liability statute.

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Head Injury

Brain Injury

Traumatic brain injuries are often invisible in the first days after a crash or fall. We document the full neurological impact and build the lifetime cost into your claim.

Catastrophic Injury

Spinal Cord & Catastrophic

Colorado does not cap economic damages or compensation for physical impairment. UCHealth Medical Center of the Rockies, a Level II Trauma Center in Loveland, handles the most serious injuries from crashes and falls in this corridor. A detailed life-care plan built on real projections is the cornerstone of a catastrophic injury recovery.

When a Life Is Lost

Wrongful Death

If a Loveland crash, dangerous property, or another person's negligence took someone you love, we handle the claim with care and resolve. Colorado's wrongful-death non-economic cap for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025 is $2,125,000 (C.R.S. 13-21-203(1)(a)).

Not Sure Which Fits?

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Motorcycle wrecks, pedestrian collisions, rideshare crashes, dog bites, slip and fall, and more. If you were hurt by someone else's carelessness in Loveland, there is likely a path to recovery. Browse all of our Colorado practice areas, then call (303) 209-9395 for a straight answer about your case.

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Local Knowledge

Loveland courts. Loveland trauma care. Loveland roads.

A Loveland injury case lives in Loveland: the road where it happened, the hospital that treated you, and the courthouse where the lawsuit may be filed. Here is the ground we work on.

Courthouse

Larimer County District Court, Fort Collins (8th Judicial District)

A Loveland civil personal-injury lawsuit that exceeds the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed in the 8th Judicial District of Colorado at the Larimer County District Court, 201 LaPorte Ave., Fort Collins, CO 80521. Loveland is in Larimer County, and all Larimer County District Court cases are handled at this Fort Collins courthouse. Loveland shares this courthouse with Fort Collins and the rest of Larimer County. Local procedure, the jury pool, and the defense firms you face are specific to the 8th Judicial District, and we handle Larimer County cases directly. Most cases settle before any lawsuit is filed, but knowing which court applies, and who sits on that jury pool, affects how we build every Loveland claim from day one.

Trauma Care

UCHealth Medical Center of the Rockies (Level II Trauma Center, Loveland)

UCHealth Medical Center of the Rockies is a Level II Trauma Center located in Loveland. It is one of the most significant local-proof anchors for this corridor: a Level II designation means the facility provides comprehensive trauma care around the clock, including surgical services, intensive care, and specialist coverage. When a Loveland crash or catastrophic injury sends someone to Medical Center of the Rockies, those trauma records become the backbone of the damages claim. McKee Medical Center is a second Loveland-area hospital providing additional acute care capacity in the community. We work directly with hospital records and billing systems to build a complete medical picture of your injury from day one through projected future treatment.

High-Crash Roads

I-25 / US-34 Interchange, US-34 (Eisenhower Blvd.), and US-287

The interchange where I-25 meets US-34 is a documented crash cluster on the Northern Front Range. This interchange funnels high-speed freeway traffic into arterial surface streets, creating rear-end, merge, and angle-collision exposure that is distinct from the general I-25 corridor. US-34, known locally as Eisenhower Boulevard, is Loveland's primary east-west commercial artery, carrying heavy vehicle volumes through signalized intersections, retail developments, and cross-traffic points. US-287, running north-south through the Loveland area, adds further high-volume arterial exposure. These three corridors together produce the majority of serious crash claims in Larimer County that originate in or near Loveland. Knowing these roads, their documented hazard patterns, and how CDOT data applies to a specific collision is how we build the liability side of a Loveland claim.

The rules of the game

The Colorado law that decides what your Loveland claim is worth

Loveland injury claims run on Colorado statutes, not local rules. A few of them quietly decide whether you recover at all and how much. Here are the ones that matter most for any Loveland case.

Deadlines that can end a Loveland claim

  • Most car and motorcycle crash injury claims must be filed within three years of the crash (C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n)). This three-year period applies to crashes involving motor vehicles on I-25, US-34, US-287, and all other Loveland roads.
  • Most other injury claims, including premises liability and slip and fall cases, carry a two-year filing deadline (C.R.S. 13-80-102(1)(a)).
  • Claims against a government entity, including a city vehicle, a Larimer County vehicle, or a public-property hazard, require a written notice of claim within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)). Missing that notice bars the claim entirely, regardless of how strong the facts are.
  • Shorter or different deadlines can apply depending on the facts. Confirm yours with an attorney as early as possible after any Loveland injury.

What you can recover in a Loveland injury case

  • Economic damages such as medical bills, lost wages, and future care costs are never capped under Colorado law. A Loveland crash that sends you to the Level II Trauma Center at UCHealth Medical Center of the Rockies can produce medical costs that compound over years. Every dollar of that economic loss is recoverable without a ceiling.
  • Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, with inflation adjustments beginning in 2028 (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5). This cap does not apply to medical malpractice or wrongful death claims.
  • Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is not capped at all. Under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5(5), nothing in that section limits recovery of compensatory damages for physical impairment or disfigurement. Serious crash cases at the I-25/US-34 interchange often build their core value from this uncapped category.
  • Under Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule, you can still recover if you were partly at fault, but recovery is barred entirely if you are found 50 percent or more at fault (C.R.S. 13-21-111).

Insurance adjusters know these rules far better than most injured people do. The 50 percent fault bar is the single most common tool insurers use to argue you should recover nothing. At a high-speed interchange like I-25 and US-34, or in a commercial-property fall on an Eisenhower Boulevard retailer, they will look for any reason to say you share the blame. Having a lawyer who knows exactly how comparative negligence, the damages caps, and the government-notice requirements apply to your specific Loveland facts is how you keep the full value of your claim on the table.

Where Loveland injuries happen

The Loveland risks we see turn into injury claims

Loveland's road network, geography, and weather create a specific set of documented dangers. Knowing where harm tends to happen helps us identify the responsible party and build the claim.

  1. The I-25 and US-34 Interchange Crash Cluster

    The interchange where I-25 meets US-34 is a known crash cluster on the Northern Front Range. Vehicles transitioning between freeway speeds on I-25 and arterial speeds on US-34 encounter merge conflicts, rear-end chains, and intersection timing failures. This interchange is a documented hazard in the Loveland area and produces a disproportionate share of the serious crash claims that originate at or near Loveland's major highway access point. If your injury happened at or near this interchange, the physical configuration of the road, the signal timing, and the volume data are all relevant to establishing liability.

  2. US-34 (Eisenhower Boulevard) Commercial Corridor

    US-34, locally called Eisenhower Boulevard, is Loveland's primary east-west commercial artery. It carries heavy vehicle volumes through a long corridor of retail developments, strip malls, driveways, and cross-street intersections. High-volume access points, left-turn conflicts, and pedestrian crossing exposures on this corridor generate angle crashes, pedestrian strikes, and rear-end collisions at a rate consistent with major commercial arterials in Colorado's growing Front Range communities. A crash on Eisenhower Boulevard often involves multiple possible at-fault parties, including commercial property owners who created or failed to address traffic hazards adjacent to their premises.

  3. US-287 North-South Corridor

    US-287 runs through the Loveland area as a high-volume north-south route connecting the Northern Front Range communities. Like US-287 segments elsewhere in Colorado, the Loveland stretch carries a mix of commuter traffic, commercial vehicles, and recreational traffic heading toward or from the Rocky Mountain foothills. Intersections along US-287 and its transitions to local arterials create documented exposure for angle collisions and turning-movement crashes.

  4. Commercial Property and Retail Premises

    Loveland's commercial development along Eisenhower Boulevard and other arterials generates significant foot traffic at retail stores, restaurants, medical offices, and shopping centers. Property owners and tenants at these locations owe visitors a duty to maintain premises in a reasonably safe condition. Wet floors, broken pavement, inadequate lighting in parking lots, and poorly maintained entry areas are among the most common sources of slip, trip, and fall injuries in commercial areas. When a commercial property owner fails that duty, Colorado's premises liability statute provides a path to recovery.

  5. Winter Weather and Seasonal Road Hazards

    Loveland sits at the base of the Colorado Rocky Mountains, where weather conditions can change rapidly. Ice and snow on I-25, US-34, and US-287 reduce traction and stopping distance, elevating rear-end and run-off-road crash risk throughout the winter season. Seasonal freeze-thaw cycles also create pavement heaving, pothole formation, and uneven walkway surfaces at commercial properties, producing premises liability exposure from November through early spring. Knowing how weather conditions documented in CDOT road reports and local weather records apply to a specific incident is part of how we establish liability on wintertime Loveland claims.

Why CGH

Why injured people in Loveland choose CGH Injury Lawyers

Trial-ready attorneys, bilingual service, and no fee unless we win. We are upfront about one thing: CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Loveland office. We serve Loveland from our Denver office and come to you. What you get is the work, not a storefront on Eisenhower Boulevard.

Trial-Ready

Built to try your case.

Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. When the lawyers across the table know we will try a case in the 8th Judicial District at the Larimer County District Court if we have to, insurers respond to demands differently. A willingness to go to trial is not a bluff. It is the foundation of every serious demand we make for a Loveland client.

Honest About Location

Serving Loveland from Denver.

Our office is at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Loveland office or a Larimer County branch. We serve Loveland and Larimer County clients from Denver, file at the Larimer County District Court in Fort Collins, and meet you where it works for you. You can reach us at (303) 209-9395.

Full Value

No category left out.

We build every Loveland claim around every loss the law allows, with particular attention to the uncapped categories that drive catastrophic-injury value, including economic damages, physical impairment, and disfigurement compensation, none of which have a ceiling under Colorado law.

Bilingual

Hablamos espanol.

Spanish-speaking staff and attorneys serve Loveland's Spanish-speaking community across all case types. No language barrier should stand between an injured person in Larimer County and access to full legal representation.

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. A serious Loveland crash should not also mean a legal bill you cannot afford while you are recovering.

One Standard

8 attorneys, one promise.

Whether your Loveland case settles in three months or goes to a Larimer County jury, the same trial-ready team and the same standard of preparation apply. We do not run a settlement mill. We prepare every case as if it will be tried, because any case can be. That consistency is what gives our demands credibility with the defense firms and insurers who regularly appear in the 8th Judicial District.

After an injury in Loveland

What to do after you are hurt in Loveland

Take care of your health first, protect the evidence, then call before you talk to the insurer. Here is the path we walk with every Loveland client.

  1. Get medical care

    Serious Loveland injuries are often treated at UCHealth Medical Center of the Rockies, a Level II Trauma Center located in Loveland. McKee Medical Center is a second local option for acute care. Even injuries that feel minor can hide nerve, spinal, or internal damage. Get examined, follow every treatment recommendation, and keep every record and bill. The medical record created in the days after a crash or fall is the foundation of your damages claim.

  2. Document the scene

    Photograph your injuries, the vehicles or property, the road conditions, and anything that contributed to the crash or fall. Get the names and contact information of any witnesses before they leave. At the I-25/US-34 interchange or on Eisenhower Boulevard, traffic cameras and commercial surveillance cameras may capture the incident. Acting quickly to preserve that footage matters because it is often recorded over within days.

  3. Know your deadlines

    A Loveland claim involving a government entity, including a road defect managed by the City of Loveland or Larimer County, or a crash involving a government vehicle, requires a formal written notice within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)). That government-notice clock starts much earlier than most people expect, and missing it ends the claim regardless of fault.

  4. Call before insurance does

    The at-fault party's insurer may call within days of the incident. Do not give a recorded statement or accept any settlement offer before speaking with us. Call (303) 209-9395 from anywhere in Loveland or Larimer County. The consultation is free and confidential.

  5. We build your claim

    We locate every available insurance policy, gather all medical records and crash reports, document the full injury and its projected future cost, and value the claim across every category the law allows. For serious Loveland crashes, that includes economic damages, the non-economic cap up to $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, and the uncapped categories of physical impairment and disfigurement.

  6. Negotiate or litigate

    Most cases settle. When insurers refuse a fair offer, we file at the Larimer County District Court in Fort Collins, 201 LaPorte Ave., and try your case in the 8th Judicial District before a Larimer County jury.

I wish I could leave more than 5 stars!
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Questions

Loveland personal injury, frequently asked questions

Does CGH Injury Lawyers have an office in Loveland?

No. CGH Injury Lawyers has one office, at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. We serve Loveland and Larimer County clients from that Denver office, file Loveland cases at the Larimer County District Court in Fort Collins, and meet you wherever is most convenient. You can reach us at (303) 209-9395. We do not claim a Loveland address, and you should be cautious of any firm that does without a verified local office.

Where would my Loveland lawsuit be filed?

A Loveland civil personal-injury case that exceeds the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed in the 8th Judicial District of Colorado at the Larimer County District Court, 201 LaPorte Ave., Fort Collins, CO 80521. Loveland is in Larimer County, and all Larimer County District Court civil cases go to this Fort Collins courthouse. Most cases settle before any lawsuit is filed, but where a case would be tried affects local procedural rules, the jury pool drawn from Larimer County residents, and the defense firms that regularly appear in the 8th Judicial District. We file and try 8th Judicial District cases directly.

How long do I have to file an injury claim in Loveland?

The deadline depends on the type of claim. Most car and motorcycle crash injury claims must be filed within three years of the crash (C.R.S. 13-80-101(1)(n)). Most other injury claims, including premises liability and slip and fall cases, carry a two-year deadline (C.R.S. 13-80-102(1)(a)). If a government entity is involved, such as a City of Loveland vehicle, a Larimer County vehicle, or a public-property defect, you must file a written notice of claim within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)) or the claim is barred entirely. Because these deadlines start from different events and shorter deadlines can apply depending on your facts, confirm your deadline with an attorney as soon as possible after any Loveland injury.

Which Loveland hospital treats serious injuries?

UCHealth Medical Center of the Rockies, located in Loveland, is a Level II Trauma Center, meaning it provides comprehensive around-the-clock trauma care including surgery and intensive care. It is one of the most capable trauma facilities on the Northern Front Range. McKee Medical Center is a second Loveland-area hospital providing acute care services. Those treatment records document the scope of your injuries and are the foundation of your damages claim. We work with those records from the start of every serious Loveland case to make sure no medical cost, past or future, is left out of the demand.

Does Colorado cap what I can recover for a Loveland injury?

Economic damages such as medical bills, lost wages, and future care costs are never capped. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, with inflation adjustments beginning in 2028 (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5). Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is not capped at all (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5(5)). That uncapped category carries significant weight in serious Loveland crash cases, particularly those involving permanent injuries from I-25 or US-34 corridor collisions. Wrongful death non-economic damages for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025 are capped at $2,125,000 under C.R.S. 13-21-203(1)(a), with no cap when the death results from a felonious killing.

Can I recover if I was partly at fault for a Loveland accident?

Often yes. Colorado follows a modified comparative negligence rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111). If you are found less than 50 percent at fault, you can still recover, though your award is reduced by your share of the fault. If you are found 50 percent or more at fault, you recover nothing. Insurers know this rule well and use it aggressively at congested locations like the I-25/US-34 interchange and on US-34's commercial corridor, where facts about who had the right of way are often disputed. Having a lawyer who can challenge fault assignments with evidence is how you protect your recovery.

It's More Than Money.

You were hurt in Loveland. We handle everything else.

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Available in English and Spanish.

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