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Hawaii Practice Area

Hawaii Tourist & Visitor Injury Lawyer

Roughly 30,000 visitors arrive in Hawaii every day, and when an accident injures a tourist, pursuing a claim from the mainland brings unique challenges.

Roughly 30,000 visitors arrive in Hawaii every day, and not everyone leaves unharmed. When a tourist is injured, the challenges multiply: returning to the mainland, coordinating medical records across states, and dealing with insurers and tour operators from afar. We help injured visitors pursue full compensation and can manage your Hawaii claim even after you fly home.

Common Visitor Injury Scenarios in Hawaii

  • Rental car and shuttle crashes on unfamiliar roads
  • Slip and falls at hotels, resorts, and pools
  • Snorkeling, diving, surfing, and boat-tour injuries
  • Zipline, ATV, and adventure-tour accidents
  • Injuries from inadequate warnings about ocean or terrain hazards
  • Moped and bicycle rental accidents

How Hawaii Law Affects Your Tourist & Visitor Injury Claim

Hawaii follows a modified comparative negligence rule (HRS § 663-31): you can recover compensation as long as you are not more than 50 percent at fault, with your award reduced by your share of fault. If you are found 51 percent or more at fault, you cannot recover. Hawaii's statute of limitations for most personal injury claims is generally two years from the date of injury under Hawaii Revised Statutes § 657-7. For motor-vehicle cases, Hawaii's no-fault system adds another layer: Hawaii is a no-fault auto insurance state. Your own Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage pays initial medical bills regardless of fault, but you must generally exceed a $5,000 medical-expense threshold (or suffer a qualifying serious injury) before you can pursue a claim for pain and suffering against the at-fault driver.

The bottom line: Hawaii's rules are full of deadlines and exceptions that insurers know well — and hope you don't. A free case review makes sure you understand your rights before you make any decisions.

What to Do After a Tourist & Visitor Injury in Hawaii

  1. Get medical care right away. Your health comes first, and prompt records link your injuries to the incident.
  2. Document everything. Photos, names, witness contacts, and details fade fast — capture them while you can.
  3. Don't give recorded statements. Insurers use them to minimize your claim. Speak with an attorney first.
  4. Don't accept a quick settlement. Early offers rarely reflect the true, long-term value of your claim.
  5. Request a free case review. Understand your options at no cost and no obligation.

What Your Tourist & Visitor Injury Claim May Recover

Depending on your case, compensation may include current and future medical expenses, lost wages and reduced earning capacity, pain and suffering, and other losses. Economic damages such as medical bills and lost income are not capped in Hawaii. The only way to understand your specific claim is a free review.

Hawaii Tourist & Visitor Injury FAQs

Nothing upfront. Our network attorneys work on contingency — you pay no fee unless they recover compensation for you. The case review is free.

Generally two years from the date of injury under Hawaii law, though maritime claims and claims against government entities follow different deadlines. Acting quickly helps preserve evidence.

It depends on the severity of your injuries, medical costs, lost income, the clarity of fault, and available insurance. Hawaii's comparative negligence rule and no-fault system also affect value. A free review is the best way to find out.

Under Hawaii's modified comparative negligence rule (HRS § 663-31), you can still recover as long as you were not more than 50 percent at fault, with your award reduced by your share.

Injured in Hawaii? Get a Free Tourist & Visitor Injury Review.

No cost, no obligation. A specialist will reach out within the hour.

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