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Nevada Personal Injury Leads for Law Firms

Exclusive personal injury leads for Nevada law firms, sourced in real time from Google Search Ads. Car and truck accidents, Las Vegas Strip hospitality and premises liability, motorcycle, pedestrian, dog bite, wrongful death, and insurance bad faith, all pre-screened for injury, fault, and filing deadline. Las Vegas, Henderson, Reno, statewide. No contracts, no monthly minimums.

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Key facts at a glance

Nevada Personal Injury Leads: Quick Reference

Last updated

Car Accident (MVA)
$475 per lead
Commercial MVA
$745 per lead
Wrongful Death
$865 per lead
Premises Liability
$265 per lead
Workers' Compensation
$150+ per lead
Source
All Google Ads
Conversion rate
15-30%
Exclusivity
Guaranteed
Freshness
Real-time
Return policy
Fair and flexible
CRM integration
Free
Custom criteria
Available
Terms
Pay per lead
Fees
None
Commitment
None

Transparent pricing

How Much Do Nevada Personal Injury Leads Cost?

Nevada personal injury leads cost $150-$865 per exclusive lead, depending on case type: $475 for car accident (MVA), $745 for commercial MVA, $865 for wrongful death, $265 for premises liability, $150+ for workers' compensation. Every price is published, flat, and the same for every firm. Pay per lead with no contracts, no minimums, and no setup fees.

Screening Criteria on Every Lead

  • No lawyer

    Not already represented by an attorney

  • Injured

    Confirmed injury, not property damage only

  • Within SOL

    Inside the statute of limitations

  • Not at fault (MVA leads)

    Fault screened before delivery

Prices current as of . Same price for every firm, no negotiation required. See nationwide pricing for all 50 states.

The Market

Why Nevada Personal Injury Files Are a Defining Vertical

Nevada is a 3.2-million-resident hospitality-economy market built around the Las Vegas Strip resort corridor. NRS 651.015 innkeeper liability for foreseeable third-party criminal acts anchors a uniquely large negligent-security vertical across casinos, hotels, nightclubs, pool decks, parking garages, and convention centers. Nevada has no strict-liability dog-bite statute (unusual for the West) and applies the common-law one-bite/scienter rule. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Miller, 125 Nev. 300 (2009) anchors strong insurance bad-faith jurisprudence, and the NRS 42.005 statutory exception leaves bad-faith punitive damages UNCAPPED. Goldblatt v. Progressive (Clark County 2024) returned a $100M punitive verdict on this exact theory.

Real Search Intent

Every lead actively typed a legal-intent query into Google. High-intent search converts 15% to 30% for most PI firms, versus 1% to 3% for social-media-sourced leads. Declared intent, not inferred interest.

Exclusive, 1 Firm Per Lead

Never shared. Aggregators sell the same lead to 3 to 5 firms simultaneously, dividing your conversion rate by the same factor. Ours go to one firm only, period.

Pre-Screened

Injured. Unrepresented. Below 51% fault. Within the 2-year clock. Hospitality files include security-incident and prior-complaint context. Public-entity files flagged for the $200K NRS 41.035 cap.

Coverage

Nevada Case Types We Generate

We generate the full Nevada personal injury spectrum. Auto and car accident is the largest-volume category, with premises liability and slip and fall close behind. Target a single case type, a subset, or the full spectrum.

Hospitality / Casino / Premises

Avg case value: $50K to $500K (severe: $1M+)

Las Vegas Strip resort properties, casino floors, hotel rooms, pools, parking garages, nightclubs, restaurants, convention centers, and rideshare staging areas. NRS 651.015 innkeeper liability for foreseeable third-party criminal acts anchors the negligent-security and inadequate-security docket. Slip-and-fall on spilled drinks, wet pool decks, and casino-floor hazards routinely settle in the high-six-figure to mid-seven-figure range.

Car Accident (Auto / MVA)

Avg case value: $25K to $200K+

The largest-volume Nevada PI category. Dedicated state page with 51% bar fault screening and NRS 11.190(4)(e) 2-year SOL tracking. I-15 (LA-LV-SLC), I-80, US-95 corridors carry commercial-vehicle volume.

Nevada deep dive

Truck & 18-Wheeler

Avg case value: $100K to $5M+

I-15 (Los Angeles to Las Vegas to Salt Lake City) is one of the deadliest U.S. interstates, ranked 6th nationally. FMCSA hours-of-service violations, equipment defects, and driver-fatigue evidence support upper-tier values. Punitive product-liability and bad-faith carve-outs under NRS 42.005 extend recovery options.

Wrongful Death

Avg case value: $500K to $10M+

2-year SOL from date of death (NRS 11.190(4)(e)). No statutory cap on noneconomic damages on private-defendant WD files. Nevada has had multiple eight- and nine-figure WD outcomes; reported $70.6M judgment cited by Ladah Law.

Motorcycle

Avg case value: $50K to $500K+

Higher injury severity than standard MVA. Clark County recorded 61 motorcyclist deaths of 293 county fatalities in 2024. 51% bar applies to rider conduct allocation; lane-position fact patterns benefit from uncapped Nevada noneconomic damages.

Pedestrian / Strip Pedestrian

Avg case value: $100K to $5M+

Nevada had 113 pedestrian fatalities in 2024 (deadliest year on record); Clark County alone recorded 96 (about 85% of state). Las Vegas Boulevard / Strip pedestrian-vehicle conflict patterns drive a defining vertical. Borderline-fault jaywalking and intoxicated-pedestrian files are flagged but not auto-rejected.

Dog Bite

Avg case value: $20K to $100K (child cases higher)

No statewide strict-liability statute (unusual for the West). Common-law one-bite/scienter rule. Local ordinances (Clark, Las Vegas, Henderson, Reno) can impose strict liability or stricter leash standards, materially affecting metro Nevada files.

Workplace & Construction

Avg case value: $75K to $1M+

NIIA workers' comp exclusivity under NRS 616A.020 bars employee tort suits against employers absent deliberate intent to injure. Third-party PI suits remain available against non-employer co-tortfeasors (other contractors, equipment manufacturers, premises owners). Construction concentrates in Las Vegas Strip resort builds and Reno-Tahoe corridor.

Insurance Bad Faith

Avg case value: variable; punitives uncapped

Nevada is one of the strongest bad-faith venues in the country. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Miller, 125 Nev. 300 (2009) requires carriers to inform insureds of all settlement offers including above policy limits. NRS 42.005 statutory exception leaves bad-faith punitive damages UNCAPPED. Goldblatt v. Progressive (Clark County 2024) returned a $100M punitive verdict on these facts.

We focus on cases firms actually want to buy. Med-mal leads can be added on request, but they are not a focus area given the NRS 41A.035 noneconomic cap (~$590K in 2026 scaling to $750K by 2028) and the NRS 41A affidavit-of-merit requirement at filing.

The Law

Nevada Personal Injury Law: Quick Reference

General PI Statute of Limitations

2 years

NRS 11.190(4)(e). Discovery rule applies. Wrongful death also 2 years from date of death.

Tort Claims (NTCA)

$200K cap (NRS 41.035)

$200,000 per claimant against state and political subdivisions. No punitive damages against governmental entities.

Med-Mal Filing

Affidavit of merit (NRS 41A)

NRS 41A requires affidavit of merit at filing for med-mal claims. Cap under NRS 41A.035 ~$590K in 2026 (AB 404, 2023) scaling to $750K by 2028.

Fault Rule

Modified, 51% Bar

NRS 41.141. Recovery if plaintiff fault is 50% or less; barred at 51%+.

PI Noneconomic Cap

None on general PI

No statutory cap on PI noneconomic damages. Med-mal capped under NRS 41A.035; the cap does not apply to general PI, premises, hospitality, or auto.

Punitive Damages

3x or $300K (NRS 42.005)

3x compensatory if compensatory ≥ $100K, else $300K. UNCAPPED for product liability, insurance bad faith, hazmat, defamation, certain DUI.

Innkeeper Liability

NRS 651.015

Hotel/casino liability for foreseeable third-party criminal acts; foreseeability based on prior similar incidents, security level, and reasonableness of response. Anchors negligent-security vertical.

Bad-Faith Insurance

Allstate v. Miller (NV 2009)

Strong bad-faith jurisprudence. Carrier must inform insured of all settlement offers including above policy limits. Punitives UNCAPPED under NRS 42.005 exception. Goldblatt v. Progressive $100M (Clark Co. 2024).

Premises Liability

Invitee / Licensee / Trespasser

Tripartite framework restored by SB 160 (2015) post-Moody v. Manny's Auto Repair (NV 1994). Casino/hotel guests are invitees owed highest duty.

Dog Bite

Common-law one-bite

No state strict-liability statute. Owner liable on scienter or negligence per se for leash-law violations. Local ordinances (Clark, Las Vegas, Henderson, Reno) can be stricter.

Workers' Comp Exclusivity

NIIA (NRS 616A.020)

Bars employee tort suits against employer absent deliberate intent to injure. Third-party PI suits remain available against non-employer co-tortfeasors.

Min Auto Liability

25/50/20

Effective 7/1/2018 (SB 308, 2017). Raised from 15/30/10. UM/UIM mandatory offer matching liability (NRS 687B.145), waivable only by written rejection on insurer's prescribed form.

Top Claim-Volume Counties

Clark | Washoe | Carson City | Lyon | Nye | Douglas | Elko | Churchill

Clark (Las Vegas, ~73% of state) and Washoe (Reno, ~15%) account for ~88% of state population. Clark recorded 293 of 412 statewide fatalities in 2024 and 96 pedestrian deaths.

General reference only. Confirm current statutes, caps, and procedural rules with your compliance counsel.

Real Outcomes

Notable Nevada Personal Injury and Bad-Faith Verdicts

Selected Nevada hospitality, premises, auto, pedestrian, and bad-faith outcomes. Nevada compensatory and noneconomic damages on private-defendant PI files are uncapped, and punitive bad-faith damages are uncapped under the NRS 42.005 statutory exception. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.

$100M

Bad Faith / Pedestrian / TBI

Goldblatt v. Progressive

Clark County 2024 punitive verdict for bad-faith delay in paying medical bills after pedestrian struck in crosswalk; severe TBI plaintiff. Punitive damages in insurance bad-faith cases are UNCAPPED under the NRS 42.005 statutory exception. Anchored by Nevada's strong Allstate Ins. Co. v. Miller (NV 2009) bad-faith framework on minimum-limits-policy refusal-to-settle facts.

$524M

Catastrophic Injury

Single-Case Catastrophic Verdict

Reported as the largest civil verdict in Nevada history at the time. Demonstrates Nevada jury appetite for catastrophic-injury outcomes when liability and damages evidence is well-developed across uncapped general PI noneconomic damages.

$70.6M

Wrongful Death

Wrongful-Death Judgment

Wrongful-death judgment reflecting Nevada's uncapped wrongful-death damages on private-defendant files. The 2-year SOL under NRS 11.190(4)(e) governs both the underlying injury and the wrongful death cause of action.

$54M

Product Liability / Catastrophic

Spinal-Cord Injury / Tire-Tread Separation

Catastrophic spinal-cord injury verdict tied to tire-tread separation. Product-liability punitive damages are UNCAPPED under the NRS 42.005 statutory exception. Tire and tread-belt separation claims often bring product-liability theories alongside the underlying auto/MVA negligence.

$15M

Hospitality / Premises (CRPS)

Cosmopolitan Hotel Spilled-Drink Slip

Hospitality-premises slip on spilled drink resulting in complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS); approximately $1M economic plus $14M pain-and-suffering. Las Vegas Strip casino, hotel, nightclub, pool, and parking-garage premises files anchor a defining Nevada vertical, with NRS 651.015 innkeeper liability for foreseeable third-party harm anchoring negligent-security claims.

$16.4M

Premises / Inadequate Security

Premises Liability Verdict

Premises liability verdict reflecting Nevada's uncapped noneconomic damages on private-defendant premises files. Inadequate-security claims under NRS 651.015 routinely produce upper-tier outcomes when foreseeability evidence (prior incidents, security level, response reasonableness) is well-developed.

Sources: Nevada Lawyer, Las Vegas Review-Journal verdict coverage, public court records, and firm-reported case results. Individual case results reflect specific facts that vary.

Lead Economics

Lead Pricing Across Nevada Practice Areas

Our Nevada pricing is published: $475 for car accident (MVA) leads, $745 for commercial MVA, $865 for wrongful death, $265 for premises liability, and $150+ for workers' compensation. Almost no other provider in this industry publishes pricing. We do, because flat per-lead prices on exclusive Google Ads leads beat the math of both DIY campaigns and shared-lead aggregators. A single exclusive lead often costs less than a handful of Nevada clicks at standard rates.

Industry Standard

What most providers sell:

  • Shared leads, sold to 3 to 5 firms at once
  • Fixed per-lead markup with margin baked in
  • Generic, low-effort intake screening
  • Monthly minimums and long-term contracts
  • Setup fees on day one
Our Approach

What you get with us:

  • Exclusive: one firm per lead, never shared
  • Transparent flat per-lead pricing
  • Pre-screened: injured, no attorney, below 51% fault, within 2-year SOL, hospitality/security context captured
  • No contracts, no minimums, pause anytime
  • No setup fees for standard onboarding

The Bottom Line

Forget the benchmarks.
Our Nevada leads typically deliver world-class ROI.

ExclusiveTransparent PricingPre-ScreenedReal-Time Delivery

Most firms pay less per signed case with us. Per-lead industry averages assume the lead is shared 3 to 5 ways. Ours never are. Nevada's NRS 651.015 innkeeper liability, the NRS 42.005 bad-faith and product-liability punitive carve-outs, and the Las Vegas Strip pedestrian-fatality concentration compound the value of pre-screened exclusive leads here.

Nevada pricing is published on this page. Every firm pays the same flat per-lead price, with county-level targeting and custom criteria available. No sales call required. No contracts, no minimums, no setup fees.

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Ready for Exclusive Nevada PI Leads?

Real-time Google Ads leads across the full Nevada PI spectrum, from auto and trucking to hospitality and Strip premises liability. Pre-screened for injury, fault under the 51% bar, representation status, and filing deadline. Public-entity files flagged for the $200K NRS 41.035 cap.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about our injury lead generation service

We cover the full Nevada personal injury spectrum: auto / car accident, truck and 18-wheeler, motorcycle, rideshare (Uber and Lyft), pedestrian and bicyclist (Las Vegas had 113 pedestrian fatalities in 2024, the deadliest year on record), hospitality and casino premises liability across casino floors, hotel rooms, pools, parking garages, nightclubs, restaurants, convention centers, and rideshare staging areas at Las Vegas Strip resort properties (MGM, Caesars, Wynn, Venetian, Cosmopolitan, Resorts World, Fontainebleau, Treasure Island, Mirage, Park MGM, Bellagio, ARIA, Mandalay Bay, Luxor, Excalibur, Stratosphere, Circa, etc.) and Reno-Tahoe properties, common-law one-bite dog bite (no Nevada strict-liability statute), wrongful death, insurance bad faith (uncapped punitives under NRS 42.005), and workplace and construction. Auto and trucking are the largest-volume categories, with premises and slip-and-fall close behind.

Nevada applies the traditional invitee / licensee / trespasser tripartite framework. After Moody v. Manny's Auto Repair, 110 Nev. 320 (1994) initially pushed Nevada toward a Rowland-style unitary standard, SB 160 (2015) reversed that and restored the traditional limited duty owed to trespassers while preserving heightened duties to invitees and licensees. Casino and hotel guests are invitees, owed the highest duty including reasonable inspection plus warning or repair of known hazards. NRS 651.015 imposes innkeeper liability for foreseeable third-party criminal acts, which makes negligent and inadequate-security claims a defining Nevada vertical (assaults, shootings, sexual assault in hotels, parking-lot crime). Under the 51% bar comparative fault rule, open-and-obvious is fault allocation rather than a categorical bar.

Nevada has NO statewide strict-liability dog-bite statute (unusual among western states; California, Arizona, Utah, Washington all have strict-liability statutes). Nevada applies the common-law "one-bite" / scienter rule: the owner is liable only if they knew or should have known of the dog's vicious propensities. Recovery theories include scienter, negligence, negligence per se for leash-law violations, and intentional tort. Local ordinances in Clark County, Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno can impose strict liability or stricter leash standards, which materially affects the analysis on metro Nevada dog-bite files.

Nevada personal injury leads cost $150 to $865 per exclusive lead, depending on case type: $475 for car accident (MVA, including motorcycle and pedestrian), $745 for commercial MVA (trucking, rideshare, bus), $865 for wrongful death, $265 for premises liability, and $150+ for workers' compensation. Pricing is flat, published, and the same for every firm, with no minimums and no contracts. For context, Nevada personal injury commercial-intent CPCs generally run $80 to $250, with Las Vegas, Henderson, and Reno at the top end (Las Vegas "casino slip and fall" and "hotel injury" CPCs concentrate in the upper portion), so a single exclusive lead often costs less than a handful of clicks.

Two years from the date of injury under NRS 11.190(4)(e) for most personal injury claims, including premises, hospitality, dog bite, and auto. The discovery rule applies. Wrongful death also runs on the 2-year clock from the date of death. Tolling for minors under NRS 11.250 begins at age 18. Med-mal claims under NRS 41A require an affidavit of merit at filing. Nevada Tort Claims Act (NRS 41.031, 41.035) caps state and political-subdivision liability at $200,000 per claimant and bars punitive damages against governmental entities. The 2-year clock is one of the shorter SOLs in the West, so Nevada intake should not assume the prospect has time to shop firms.

Nevada applies modified comparative fault under NRS 41.141 with a 51% bar. A plaintiff recovers if their fault is "not greater than" the combined fault of defendants (50% or less); barred at 51%+. Damages are reduced proportionally below the bar. The same rule applies to premises, dog bite, hospitality, and most negligence claims. Open-and-obvious hazard analysis falls into fault allocation rather than categorical bar. Borderline-fault Nevada PI leads (slip-and-fall in casino areas with prior-warning signage, premises files where plaintiff was intoxicated) are flagged at intake for additional context and not auto-rejected.

Not on standard PI cases. Med-mal noneconomic damages are capped under NRS 41A.035 (as amended by AB 404, 2023), scaling upward $80,000 each year starting 1/1/2024 until reaching $750,000 in 2028; the cap is approximately $590,000 in 2026 and is published annually by the Nevada Supreme Court. The med-mal cap does not apply to general PI, premises, hospitality, or auto cases. Punitive damages are capped under NRS 42.005 at 3x compensatory if compensatory >= $100K, or $300K if less, but the cap does NOT apply to product liability, insurance bad faith, hazardous-materials exposure, defamation, or certain DUI cases. Goldblatt v. Progressive (Clark County 2024) returned a $100M punitive verdict on the bad-faith exception.

NRS 651.015 governs innkeeper liability for foreseeable third-party criminal acts (assaults, sexual assaults, shootings, robberies on hotel/casino property). The statute requires foreseeability analysis based on prior similar incidents on the property or in the immediate vicinity, the level of security maintained, and the reasonableness of the response. Nevada hospitality properties carry uniquely concentrated negligent-security exposure given the volume of guests, the late-night and alcohol-driven activity profile, and the parking-garage and pool-area attack patterns. Las Vegas casino, hotel, nightclub, and parking-garage premises files routinely settle in the high-six- to mid-seven-figure range when foreseeability evidence and prior-incident discovery is well-developed.

Yes. Allstate Ins. Co. v. Miller, 125 Nev. 300, 212 P.3d 318 (2009) is the foundational Nevada bad-faith case: it requires the insurer to inform the insured of all settlement offers, including those above policy limits, and treats failure to do so as evidence of bad faith. Combined with the NRS 42.005 statutory exception that leaves bad-faith punitive damages UNCAPPED, Nevada is one of the strongest bad-faith venues in the country. Goldblatt v. Progressive (Clark County 2024) returned a $100M punitive verdict on bad-faith conduct after Progressive delayed paying medical bills on a pedestrian-struck-in-crosswalk file with severe TBI. Bad-faith claims are often paired with the underlying auto/PI file as a separate recovery vehicle on minimum-limits-policy refusal-to-settle facts.

Yes. Every Nevada lead is screened for SOL position under NRS 11.190(4)(e), representation status, injury, and 51% bar comparative-fault sanity check under NRS 41.141. Hospitality and premises leads include surface-condition and security-incident context. Public-entity files are flagged for the $200,000 NRS 41.035 per-claimant cap and the no-punitives bar against governmental entities. Med-mal leads are flagged for the NRS 41A affidavit-of-merit requirement at filing.

None. No monthly minimums, no subscriptions, no setup fees for standard onboarding. Pay per lead. Pause or resume anytime. Invalid leads are replaced under our standard policy.

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