Motor vehicle accidents in Kansas
Kansas traffic clusters around the Kansas City metro on the Missouri line — Overland Park, Olathe, and Kansas City, Kansas — where I-35, I-70, and I-435 converge. Wichita anchors the south-central part of the state along I-35 and the Kansas Turnpike, while I-70 runs the long east–west haul across the plains toward Topeka, Salina, and the Colorado line.
The mix of dense Johnson County commuting and high-speed turnpike travel is where most auto-injury demand originates for Kansas personal injury firms.
Kansas injury law that shapes these cases
Kansas is a no-fault / PIP state under the Kansas Automobile Injury Reparations Act. An injured person's own PIP pays medical bills first regardless of fault, and they can only pursue a liability claim for pain and suffering after crossing a tort threshold — typically $2,000 in medical expenses or a permanent/serious injury — so injury severity matters at intake.
The statute of limitations for personal injury is two years from the date of the crash (K.S.A. § 60-513). Kansas applies modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar (K.S.A. § 60-258a): recovery is allowed only if the claimant's fault is less than 50%, reduced by their share.
Minimum auto liability limits are 25/50/25 — $25,000 bodily injury per person, $50,000 per accident, and $25,000 property damage — plus mandatory PIP with at least $4,500 in medical benefits and required uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage at 25/50.
How we screen Kansas leads
We run our own motor-vehicle-accident campaigns across Kansas and capture each claimant ourselves — no shared pools, no aggregator resale. Because Kansas is a no-fault state with a monetary tort threshold, our injury screen is what tells you whether a claim can leave the PIP system and become a liability case worth working.
- Recent accident — the crash is recent and well inside the two-year filing window.
- Real injury — the claimant reports an actual injury, the gateway past the tort threshold.
- Not at fault — the claimant states another driver caused the collision, so there is a liable party for the tort claim.
Kansas advertising & lead-gen compliance
Any marketing call or text to a Kansas claimant is governed by the federal Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA), which requires prior express written consent before a marketing contact. The FCC's one-to-one consent rule was vacated by the 11th Circuit in January 2025, so it no longer applies — but proper prior express consent is still mandatory, and the FCC's April 2025 revocation rules require opt-outs to be honored promptly.
Kansas has a consumer-protection and no-call framework (the Kansas No-Call Act) but no mini-TCPA that adds new private-damage liability to consented marketing. The state-level rules that bear on legal lead gen are the Kansas Rules of Professional Conduct on advertising, which prohibit false or misleading communications and guarantees about the outcome of a case. When a vendor ignores them, the firm that bought the lead is the one on the hook.
Kurios keeps to the defensible side of all of this: consent-based, advertising-driven campaigns, required disclosures on our landing pages, no outcome guarantees, opt-outs honored, and each lead to one firm only. For a Kansas firm working Johnson County and the Wichita market, that means the leads you buy build your caseload without carrying another company's compliance exposure into your firm. For the authoritative rules behind all of this, see the Kansas Bar Association’s attorney-advertising rules and the FCC’s TCPA rules on telemarketing and robocalls.
Why Kansas personal injury firms work with Kurios
A Kansas firm's true metric is cost per signed case, and exclusivity plus speed is what protects it. Every Kansas lead is exclusive to one firm, screened for a recent crash, a real injury past the tort threshold, and a liable at-fault driver, and pushed to your CRM — Filevine, Litify, Salesforce, and others — in under 10 seconds, so your intake team calls first across Johnson County and Wichita. No shared pools, no washed lists, no wrong-number junk — just claimants worth working.
Start with a 3-month test batch of 50 exclusive leads a month — month-to-month, cancel anytime within the 3 months, no retainer — so you can prove cost per signed case on your own numbers. Compare our model to shared and aged leads, or browse the full MVA lead program and the landscape of MVA lead companies.
Ready for exclusive MVA leads, delivered to your CRM in under 10 seconds?
See If You QualifyFrequently Asked Questions
What is the statute of limitations for a car accident claim in Kansas?
Two years from the date of the accident for personal injury claims, under K.S.A. § 60-513.
Is Kansas a no-fault state?
Yes. Kansas is a no-fault/PIP state — your own PIP pays medical bills first, and you must cross a tort threshold (about $2,000 in medical bills or a serious injury) to sue for pain and suffering.
How does fault affect a Kansas claim?
Kansas uses modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar — recovery is allowed only if the claimant's fault is less than 50%, reduced by their share.
Does Kansas have a state telemarketing law affecting lead gen?
Kansas has a No-Call Act but no mini-TCPA adding private-damage exposure to consented marketing. Legal lead gen is governed by the federal TCPA plus the Kansas Rules of Professional Conduct on advertising, and our consent-based campaigns comply with both.
Are your Kansas leads TCPA-compliant?
Yes. We use documented, consent-based capture with required disclosures, honor opt-outs promptly, and make no case-outcome guarantees. The FCC's one-to-one consent rule was vacated in January 2025, but prior express consent is still required and we capture it.
Are your Kansas leads exclusive?
Yes. Every Kansas lead goes to one firm only — never shared, resold, or recycled.
How fast do Kansas leads reach my CRM?
In under 10 seconds. We push each lead directly into your CRM in real time so your intake team can call immediately.
