Key Takeaways
Rollover crashes are among the most violent vehicle accidents, often caused by top-heavy SUVs, overcorrection, tire blowouts, or defective vehicle design. Occupants suffer traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, ejection injuries, and crush injuries. Liability may fall on other drivers, vehicle manufacturers, or government entities responsible for road conditions. Georgia bars recovery at 50% or more fault (O.C.G.A. SS 51-12-33) and allows two years to file (O.C.G.A. SS 9-3-33), while South Carolina bars recovery at 51% fault and allows three years (S.C. Code SS 15-3-530).
Any car accident can cause serious harm, but few types of crashes are as violent or as dangerous as a rollover. When a vehicle flips onto its side or roof — sometimes multiple times — the forces inside the cabin are extreme, unpredictable, and often catastrophic. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), rollovers account for approximately 2% of all crashes but are responsible for nearly 30% of all passenger vehicle fatalities.
If you or a loved one has been injured in a rollover crash in Georgia or South Carolina, understanding how these accidents happen, what injuries they cause, and who can be held liable is the first step toward recovering the compensation you deserve.
What Is a Rollover Crash?
A rollover crash occurs when a vehicle tips over onto its side or roof during a collision or loss of control. Rollovers can be categorized into two types:
- Tripped rollovers — the vehicle strikes an external object such as a curb, guardrail, median, soft shoulder, or another vehicle, which causes it to flip. Tripped rollovers account for roughly 95% of all single-vehicle rollovers.
- Untripped rollovers — the vehicle rolls over without striking an object, typically during high-speed maneuvers, sharp turns, or overcorrection. These are more common with top-heavy vehicles like SUVs, pickup trucks, and vans.
Rollovers can involve a single quarter-turn onto the side or multiple full rotations at highway speed. The more rotations, the greater the forces acting on the occupants and the higher the risk of catastrophic injury or death.
How Rollover Crashes Happen
Several factors contribute to rollover crashes, often in combination:
Driver Behavior
- Excessive speed — speed is a factor in nearly 40% of fatal rollovers; high speed increases the lateral forces during turns and makes recovery from a skid nearly impossible
- Overcorrection — jerking the steering wheel after drifting off the road or during a skid is one of the most common triggers for a rollover
- Distracted driving — a driver who drifts onto the shoulder while texting may overcorrect when they look up, initiating a rollover
- Impaired driving — alcohol and drugs impair reaction time and judgment, contributing to the loss of control that precedes many rollovers
Road and Environmental Conditions
- Wet, icy, or gravel roads — reduced traction makes vehicles more likely to skid and roll
- Steep embankments and slopes — vehicles that leave the road on a steep grade can roll down the embankment
- Sharp curves — curves with inadequate banking or missing guardrails increase rollover risk, especially at speed
- Road defects — potholes, uneven shoulders, and missing warning signs can cause a driver to lose control
Vehicle Factors
- High center of gravity — SUVs, pickup trucks, vans, and top-heavy commercial vehicles are significantly more prone to rollovers than sedans
- Tire blowouts — a sudden tire failure, especially on the front axle, can cause the driver to lose control
- Roof crush defects — a roof that collapses during a rollover magnifies the injuries to occupants inside
- Overloaded or improperly loaded vehicles — cargo that shifts during a turn can alter the vehicle’s center of gravity and trigger a rollover
What Happens to Your Body During a Rollover
A rollover subjects your body to forces that no other type of crash replicates. As the vehicle rotates, occupants experience:
- Violent multi-directional movement — unlike a front or rear collision where force comes from one direction, a rollover throws your body sideways, upward, and downward in rapid succession
- Contact with interior surfaces — your head, limbs, and torso strike the roof, doors, windows, steering column, and dashboard repeatedly as the vehicle rotates
- Seatbelt loading — while a seatbelt prevents ejection, the restraint itself applies extreme force across the chest, abdomen, and pelvis during each rotation
- Roof intrusion — if the roof crushes inward, occupants in the cabin have less survival space, and their heads and spines are compressed
- Partial or full ejection — unbelted occupants can be thrown from the vehicle through windows or doors that open during the rollover, which dramatically increases the risk of death
The NHTSA reports that occupants who are ejected from a vehicle during a rollover are roughly 8 times more likely to be killed than those who remain inside.
Common Injuries Caused by Rollover Crashes
Rollover crashes produce some of the most severe injuries in all of motor vehicle litigation. The most common include:
- Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) — concussions, contusions, diffuse axonal injuries, and skull fractures from the head striking interior surfaces or the crushing roof
- Spinal cord injuries — herniated discs, vertebral fractures, and partial or complete paralysis caused by compression and hyperflexion of the spine
- Broken bones — fractures of the arms, legs, ribs, pelvis, collarbone, and facial bones from impacts with the vehicle interior and restraint forces
- Internal organ damage — lacerations or contusions to the liver, spleen, kidneys, and lungs from blunt force trauma; internal bleeding can be life-threatening if not detected quickly
- Burn injuries — fuel leaks and electrical fires during or after a rollover can cause severe thermal burns
- Crush injuries and amputations — roof collapse and entrapment can crush limbs, requiring surgical amputation
- Lacerations and degloving injuries — shattered glass and torn metal cause deep cuts and soft tissue injuries
- Whiplash and neck injuries — the rapid multi-directional forces cause severe cervical spine strain, even with seatbelt use
- PTSD and psychological trauma — the terrifying nature of a rollover frequently causes lasting anxiety, flashbacks, and depression
Who Is Liable for a Rollover Crash?
Depending on the circumstances, several parties may bear responsibility for a rollover crash:
- Another driver — if another vehicle caused the collision that triggered the rollover (e.g., sideswiping you, running a red light, cutting you off), that driver is liable for your injuries. This is the basis of a standard car accident or truck accident claim.
- Vehicle manufacturer — if a design defect made the vehicle unreasonably prone to rolling over, or if the roof crushed in a way that worsened your injuries, the manufacturer may be liable under a product liability theory. Common defects include inadequate roof strength, faulty electronic stability control, and tire defects.
- Tire manufacturer — tire blowouts caused by manufacturing defects or design flaws are a known rollover trigger
- Government entity — if a road defect, missing guardrail, or inadequate signage contributed to the crash, the state or local government responsible for road maintenance may be liable. Claims against government entities in Georgia and South Carolina have special notice requirements and shorter deadlines.
- Trucking company — if a commercial truck caused the rollover, the trucking company may be liable for improper loading, inadequate maintenance, or driver fatigue violations
- Cargo loaders — improperly secured cargo that shifts during transit and triggers a rollover creates liability for the party responsible for loading
How Comparative Fault Works in Rollover Cases
Insurance companies frequently argue that the victim contributed to the rollover — by speeding, overcorrecting, or not wearing a seatbelt. Both Georgia and South Carolina apply modified comparative fault rules:
- Georgia (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-33): You can recover as long as you are less than 50% at fault. Your award is reduced by your percentage of responsibility.
- South Carolina: You can recover as long as you are less than 51% at fault. Your award is reduced by your percentage of responsibility.
Seatbelt defense: In Georgia, evidence that you were not wearing a seatbelt is admissible and can reduce your recovery by up to 5% (O.C.G.A. § 40-8-76.1). In South Carolina, failure to wear a seatbelt can also be considered but is generally limited in its impact on your total recovery. Regardless, not wearing a seatbelt does not bar your claim — it may only reduce your damages.
Damages You Can Recover After a Rollover Crash
Rollover crash victims in Georgia and South Carolina may recover:
Economic Damages
- Emergency medical care, surgery, hospitalization, and rehabilitation
- Future medical treatment and long-term care needs
- Lost wages during recovery
- Lost earning capacity if injuries prevent you from returning to your previous occupation
- Vehicle repair or replacement and other property damage
- Adaptive equipment and home modifications for permanent disabilities
Non-Economic Damages
- Pain and suffering
- Emotional distress, PTSD, anxiety, and depression
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Disfigurement and scarring
- Loss of consortium
Punitive Damages
If the at-fault party acted with gross negligence or reckless disregard — such as driving drunk or a manufacturer knowingly selling a vehicle with a rollover-prone design — you may recover punitive damages. Georgia caps punitive damages at $250,000 with exceptions for DUI and intentional conduct (O.C.G.A. § 51-12-5.1). South Carolina caps them at the greater of 3x compensatory damages or $500,000 (S.C. Code § 15-32-530).
Wrongful Death
If a rollover crash kills a loved one, surviving family members may file a wrongful death claim to recover funeral expenses, lost financial support, and compensation for the loss of companionship and guidance.
Statute of Limitations in Georgia and South Carolina
You have a limited time to file a personal injury lawsuit after a rollover crash:
- Georgia: 2 years from the date of injury (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33)
- South Carolina: 3 years from the date of injury (S.C. Code § 15-3-530)
If the rollover involved a government entity (e.g., a road defect claim), you may need to provide ante-litem notice much sooner — as early as 6 months to 1 year depending on the jurisdiction. Missing these deadlines can permanently bar your claim, which is why consulting an attorney promptly after a rollover crash is critical.
What to Do After a Rollover Crash
The steps you take immediately after a rollover can significantly impact your ability to recover compensation:
- Call 911 — request police and emergency medical services, even if injuries seem minor. Adrenaline can mask serious internal injuries.
- Stay in the vehicle if possible — unless there is a fire or imminent danger, remaining in the vehicle and waiting for emergency responders reduces the risk of further injury.
- Seek medical attention immediately — go to the emergency room or see a doctor within 24 hours. Delayed treatment gives insurers an excuse to downplay your injuries.
- Document everything — photograph the vehicle from all angles, capture the road conditions, your injuries, and the surrounding area.
- Get the police report — request a copy from the responding agency as soon as it is available.
- Do not give a recorded statement to the insurance company — anything you say can be used to reduce or deny your claim.
- Contact a personal injury attorney — an attorney can preserve critical evidence, handle insurance communications, and protect your rights from day one.
How a Personal Injury Lawyer Can Help
Rollover cases are among the most complex personal injury claims because they often involve multiple liable parties, vehicle defect investigations, and severe injuries requiring lifelong care. An experienced attorney can help by:
- Investigating the cause — determining whether the rollover was caused by another driver, a vehicle defect, a tire failure, a road hazard, or a combination of factors
- Hiring accident reconstruction experts — engineers and biomechanical experts who can demonstrate exactly how the crash occurred and how the injuries were sustained
- Pursuing all liable parties — filing claims against the at-fault driver, vehicle manufacturer, tire maker, government entity, or trucking company as applicable
- Fighting comparative fault arguments — countering the insurer’s attempts to blame you for speeding, overcorrecting, or not wearing a seatbelt
- Calculating lifetime damages — working with medical and vocational experts to document future care costs, lost earnings, and long-term impact on your quality of life
Free Consultation — No Fee Unless We Win
At Roden Law, we handle car accident and personal injury cases on a contingency fee basis — you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you. If you or a loved one was injured in a rollover crash in Georgia or South Carolina, contact us today for a free case evaluation or call 1-844-RESULTS.
