New York is a no-fault state — but that phrase confuses almost everyone. Here's what it actually means for your medical bills and your right to sue.
New York is one of a minority of states with a 'no-fault' auto insurance system. The name is misleading: it does not mean no one is at fault, and it does not mean you can never sue. It describes how your initial medical bills get paid after a crash. Understanding it is the key to understanding almost every New York car-accident claim.
What no-fault covers
After most car accidents, your own auto insurance pays your early expenses through Personal Injury Protection (PIP), regardless of who caused the crash. Standard no-fault benefits cover reasonable medical expenses, a portion of lost earnings (up to statutory limits), and certain other costs. The baseline coverage in New York is $50,000 per person.
The no-fault application (form NF-2) generally must be submitted to the insurer within 30 days of the accident. Missing it can jeopardize your benefits — one of the most common and avoidable mistakes injured drivers make.
What no-fault does NOT cover
No-fault does not pay for pain and suffering, and it does not cover damages above your PIP limits. That is where a claim against the at-fault driver comes in — but New York only allows such a claim if your injury meets the 'serious injury' threshold set by state law.
The exceptions that matter
- Motorcyclists are generally excluded from no-fault benefits.
- Pedestrians and cyclists struck by a car are usually covered by that car's no-fault policy.
- No-fault applies to injuries, not vehicle damage — property damage is handled through liability or collision coverage.
Why this matters for your claim
Because no-fault handles the first layer of medical bills but never pain and suffering, the real value of a serious-injury case lies in the liability claim against the at-fault party. Getting the no-fault paperwork right protects your immediate care; building the liability claim protects your full recovery. An attorney who understands both layers — and who has seen how insurers defend them — can keep a technical mistake from costing you the case.