Key Takeaways

Charleston parking lot and garage accidents involve unique liability questions because most occur on private property where standard traffic laws may not fully apply under South Carolina law. Property owners can be liable for poor lighting, inadequate signage, or dangerous design. Pedestrian strikes in parking areas are common. South Carolina's comparative fault rule bars recovery at 51% or more fault, and the filing deadline is three years (S.C. Code Β§ 15-3-530).

Charleston is a city where parking is notoriously scarce and perpetually contested. In downtown Charleston, narrow streets, historic building setbacks, and a booming tourism economy mean that drivers spend significant time circling blocks, navigating multi-level garages, and squeezing into tight spaces in shopping center lots. That combination of congestion, frustration, and limited visibility produces a surprising volume of car accidents — and many of the most serious ones happen not on highways or major intersections, but in parking lots and parking garages that drivers assume are low-risk environments.

According to the National Safety Council (NSC), tens of thousands of crashes occur in parking lots and parking structures across the United States every year, resulting in hundreds of deaths and thousands of serious injuries annually. These are not minor fender-benders. Parking lot collisions frequently involve pedestrians, children, cyclists, and motorcyclists who are struck by drivers who are backing out of spaces, cutting through lanes, or accelerating toward exits without checking their surroundings.

If you have been injured in a parking lot or parking garage accident in the Charleston area, understanding who may be at fault, how South Carolina law applies on private property, and what steps to take immediately after the crash can make a significant difference in the outcome of your claim.

Parking Lot and Parking Garage Accidents in Charleston

Charleston’s parking infrastructure creates a distinct set of hazards. Downtown garages operated by the City of Charleston, private garages serving hotels and office buildings, and surface lots attached to shopping centers on Highway 17 each present different risk profiles. But they share common features that make accidents likely: tight turning radii, obstructed sight lines, pedestrians walking in driving lanes, and drivers who are distracted by searching for open spaces or reading signage.

Downtown Parking Garages

Multi-level garages in downtown Charleston concentrate many of the worst hazards. Drivers navigating steep ramps between floors have limited visibility around corners. The transition between dim interior lighting and bright sunlight at the exit level creates momentary blindness. Tight spiral ramps encourage drivers to cut corners, crossing into oncoming lanes within the structure. And the exits from these garages often deposit vehicles directly onto busy sidewalks and narrow streets where pedestrians and cyclists have the right of way.

Shopping Center and Retail Lots

Large retail parking lots in Mount Pleasant, West Ashley, and North Charleston generate high volumes of backing collisions. Drivers pulling out of angled spaces have limited rear visibility, particularly in SUVs and trucks with large blind zones. The absence of clearly marked driving lanes in many lots allows drivers to cut diagonally across rows, creating unexpected conflict points with vehicles and pedestrians moving through the designated travel lanes.

Hospital and Medical Facility Lots

MUSC, Roper St. Francis, and other medical facilities in the Charleston area have parking structures and surface lots where patients — many of whom are elderly, mobility-impaired, or disoriented after medical procedures — walk through active driving areas. These settings produce pedestrian accident claims with particularly vulnerable victims.

Common Parking Lot Accident Scenarios

Backing Out of a Space

The single most common parking lot collision involves a driver backing out of a space and striking another vehicle traveling through the lane. The driver who is backing bears a heightened duty of care because they are moving into a shared traffic lane and must yield to vehicles already in that lane. Backup cameras help, but they have limited fields of view and do not eliminate blind spots on either side of the vehicle. When two vehicles back out of opposing spaces simultaneously, determining fault becomes more complicated and often depends on which driver entered the lane first and how far each had progressed.

Right-of-Way Disputes at Intersections Within Lots

Parking lots have internal intersections where feeder lanes meet main thoroughfares. In most lots, the wider main lanes have the right of way over narrower feeder rows, similar to how a side street yields to a main road. However, many parking lots lack stop signs, yield signs, or lane markings at these intersections. When two drivers reach an unmarked intersection simultaneously, the general rule in South Carolina is that the driver on the right has the right of way — the same rule that applies on public roads. Disputes over who arrived first or who had the right of way are among the most contested issues in parking lot accident claims.

Speeding Through Lots

Posted speed limits in parking lots typically range from 5 to 15 mph, but many drivers exceed these limits, particularly in large lots where they are trying to reach an exit or a perceived open space. A vehicle traveling at 20-25 mph through a parking lot has significantly less stopping distance than one traveling at the posted 10 mph, and the difference is often the margin between a near-miss and a serious collision. Speeding in a parking lot is strong evidence of negligence in a South Carolina accident claim.

Failure to Stop at Lot Exit Points

Drivers exiting parking lots onto public streets must yield to traffic on the street and to pedestrians on the sidewalk. In Charleston, where sidewalk traffic is heavy in commercial areas and along the peninsula, drivers who pull out of lot exits without stopping create a serious risk of striking pedestrians. These crashes often result in traumatic brain injuries because the pedestrian has no warning and no time to brace for impact.

Who Is at Fault in a Charleston Parking Lot Crash?

Fault in parking lot accidents follows the same negligence principles that apply to any motor vehicle collision in South Carolina. The driver who failed to exercise reasonable care — by backing without checking mirrors, ignoring right-of-way rules, speeding, or driving while distracted — is liable for the injuries and property damage they cause.

Several general fault rules apply in common parking lot scenarios:

  • Backing driver vs. through-traffic: The driver backing out of a space is almost always at fault when they collide with a vehicle already in the travel lane. The backing driver has the duty to yield to traffic in the lane.
  • Two drivers backing simultaneously: Fault is typically shared. Investigators examine how far each vehicle had backed, whether either driver had a clear view, and whether either driver failed to stop when the collision became avoidable.
  • Intersection collisions within the lot: The driver who failed to yield the right of way bears primary fault. If neither had a stop sign, the driver on the left typically should have yielded to the driver on the right.
  • Striking a legally parked vehicle: The moving driver is at fault. A legally parked vehicle cannot be negligent.
  • Pedestrian strikes: Drivers owe a heightened duty of care to pedestrians in parking lots, where pedestrians are expected to be walking in and near driving lanes.

Pedestrian Strikes in Parking Lots and Garages

Parking lots are among the most dangerous environments for pedestrians because there is no separation between vehicle traffic and foot traffic. Pedestrians walk behind reversing vehicles, between parked cars, and along driving lanes to reach store entrances and stairwells. Children are particularly at risk because they are below the sight line of many vehicle mirrors and backup cameras, and they may dart between parked cars without warning.

When a driver strikes a pedestrian in a parking lot, the driver is typically at fault unless the pedestrian’s conduct was so unexpected and unforeseeable that the driver could not have avoided the collision. In practice, courts in South Carolina recognize that drivers must anticipate the presence of pedestrians in parking lots and drive at speeds that allow them to stop if a pedestrian appears. A driver who backs out of a space without checking behind the vehicle, or who accelerates through a crosswalk area near a store entrance, will have difficulty avoiding liability.

Injuries from parking lot pedestrian strikes are often severe despite the relatively low vehicle speeds involved. A vehicle traveling at just 10-15 mph can knock a pedestrian to the ground, causing skull fractures, traumatic brain injuries, hip fractures, and spinal injuries — particularly in elderly victims whose bones are more fragile and who may already have balance or mobility challenges.

Parking Garage Owner Liability for Unsafe Conditions

Parking lot and garage accidents are not always solely the fault of another driver. In many cases, the property owner or operator bears partial or full responsibility for creating or failing to correct conditions that make accidents foreseeable. This is a premises liability claim, and it operates under different legal principles than a standard vehicle negligence claim.

Under South Carolina premises liability law, a property owner who invites the public onto their property for a business purpose — which includes every commercial parking lot and paid parking garage — owes a duty to maintain the property in a reasonably safe condition and to warn of hazards that are not obvious. When a parking garage or lot owner in Charleston fails to meet that standard, and someone is injured as a result, the owner may be liable.

Design Defects

Some parking garages are inherently dangerous because of how they were designed. Ramps with blind curves that prevent drivers from seeing oncoming traffic. Columns placed too close to driving lanes that block sight lines at intersections. Exit ramps that deposit vehicles onto sidewalks at speeds that make it impossible to stop for pedestrians. Lanes that are too narrow for modern vehicles, forcing drivers into opposing traffic when navigating turns. These design defects are the responsibility of the property owner, and when they contribute to an accident, the owner can be held liable for the resulting injuries.

Poor Lighting

Inadequate lighting in parking garages and surface lots contributes to accidents in two ways. First, dim lighting makes it harder for drivers to see pedestrians, other vehicles, lane markings, and obstacles. Second, poor lighting creates a security hazard by providing cover for criminal activity — assaults, carjackings, and robberies that result in physical injuries. A parking garage owner who fails to maintain adequate lighting throughout the structure, including stairwells and elevator lobbies, may be liable under a premises liability theory when the lack of lighting contributes to an accident or a criminal attack.

Missing or Confusing Signage

Stop signs, directional arrows, speed limit postings, and pedestrian crossing markings are not merely suggestions in a parking facility — they are safety infrastructure that drivers rely on to navigate the space safely. When a property owner fails to install adequate signage, or when existing signage is damaged, obscured, or contradictory, the resulting confusion can cause collisions that would otherwise have been avoided.

Deteriorated Surfaces

Potholes, crumbling speed bumps, oil slicks, and standing water in parking structures cause vehicles to lose control and pedestrians to trip and fall. A property owner who knows about these conditions — or should know about them through reasonable inspection — and fails to repair them or warn users can be held liable for injuries that result.

Private Property vs. Public Road Rules in South Carolina

One of the most common misconceptions about parking lot accidents is that traffic laws do not apply on private property. The reality in South Carolina is more nuanced. While certain provisions of the state’s Uniform Act Regulating Traffic apply only to “highways” (which includes public roads but generally not private parking lots), the fundamental rules of negligence still apply everywhere. A driver who operates a vehicle carelessly on private property is just as liable for the injuries they cause as a driver who does so on a public road.

Key distinctions between private parking lots and public roads in South Carolina include:

  • DUI laws apply on private property. South Carolina’s DUI statute applies to the operation of a motor vehicle “within this State,” which courts have interpreted to include private parking lots.
  • Specific traffic code violations (such as failure to signal a turn or failure to obey a traffic control device) may not technically apply in a private lot that has no officially designated traffic control devices. However, the conduct itself — failing to signal, ignoring a stop sign — is still relevant evidence of negligence.
  • Parking lot accidents are still reportable if they result in injury, death, or significant property damage. South Carolina law (S.C. Code Section 56-5-1270) requires drivers to report accidents that cause injury or death regardless of where they occur.

For purposes of a personal injury claim, the private-property distinction rarely helps the at-fault driver. South Carolina courts apply the same negligence standard to parking lot crashes as they do to collisions on public roads: did the driver exercise the care that a reasonably prudent person would exercise under the same circumstances?

Police Reports for Parking Lot Crashes

Many people believe that police will not respond to or write a report for a parking lot accident because it occurred on private property. While it is true that some law enforcement agencies deprioritize parking lot calls when no injuries are apparent, you should always call the police after a parking lot accident that results in injuries. A police report creates an official record of the crash, documents the positions of the vehicles, records the other driver’s information and insurance details, and may include the officer’s assessment of fault.

If police decline to respond, take the following steps to protect your claim:

  • Photograph the scene from multiple angles, including both vehicles, the parking space layout, sight lines, lighting conditions, and any signage or lack thereof.
  • Get the other driver’s name, phone number, license plate, insurance information, and driver’s license number.
  • Identify witnesses — other shoppers, parking lot attendants, security guards — and get their contact information.
  • Note whether the parking lot has security cameras, and request that the property owner preserve the footage before it is overwritten.
  • Seek medical attention, even if your injuries seem minor. The adrenaline of a collision can mask symptoms of whiplash, concussion, and soft tissue injuries that may not become fully apparent for hours or days.

Comparative Fault in South Carolina and Georgia

Parking lot accidents frequently involve shared fault. Both drivers may have been inattentive, or a pedestrian may have walked behind a reversing vehicle without looking. South Carolina and Georgia both apply modified comparative fault rules, but the thresholds differ.

South Carolina follows a modified comparative fault system under which you can recover damages as long as your percentage of fault is not greater than 50% (i.e., you must be less than 51% at fault). If you are found 30% at fault for a parking lot accident and the other party is 70% at fault, your damages are reduced by 30% but you still recover the remaining 70%. If you are found 51% or more at fault, you recover nothing.

Georgia applies a similar but slightly stricter rule under O.C.G.A. Section 51-12-33. In Georgia, you can recover damages only if your fault is less than 50%. If you are found exactly 50% at fault, you are barred from recovery. This distinction matters for accident victims in the Charleston area who may also have connections to Georgia through Roden Law’s offices serving both states.

Insurance adjusters handling parking lot claims frequently attempt to assign 50% fault to each driver, particularly in backing accidents or intersection collisions where both drivers arguably could have avoided the crash. This allocation is often strategic rather than factual — at 50% fault in Georgia, the injured party recovers nothing, and in South Carolina, the recovery is cut in half. An experienced car accident lawyer can challenge these fault allocations with physical evidence, witness testimony, and accident reconstruction analysis.

Filing Deadlines for Parking Lot Accident Claims

The statute of limitations for personal injury claims arising from parking lot accidents is the same as for any motor vehicle accident or premises liability claim:

  • South Carolina: 3 years from the date of the accident (S.C. Code Section 15-3-530)
  • Georgia: 2 years from the date of the accident (O.C.G.A. Section 9-3-33)

If your claim involves premises liability against a parking lot or garage owner, the same deadlines apply. However, evidence preservation becomes more urgent in premises liability cases. Security camera footage is typically overwritten within days or weeks. Lighting conditions may be repaired after an accident. Pavement conditions change with weather and maintenance. The sooner you or your attorney sends a formal preservation letter to the property owner, the more evidence will be available to support your claim.

For claims against government-owned parking facilities — such as city-operated garages in downtown Charleston — shorter notice requirements may apply under the South Carolina Tort Claims Act. You may need to file a notice of claim within a shorter window than the general statute of limitations, making prompt legal consultation critical.

How a Charleston Accident Lawyer Can Help

Parking lot accident claims present challenges that differ from typical road-accident cases. The private-property setting, the frequent absence of police reports, the involvement of premises liability theories against property owners, and the insurance industry’s tendency to assign shared fault all create obstacles that an experienced attorney can navigate effectively.

A Charleston car accident lawyer from Roden Law can help by:

  • Securing surveillance footage before it is overwritten, by sending immediate preservation demands to property owners, businesses, and any entity with cameras covering the parking area.
  • Investigating premises liability against the parking lot or garage owner, including documenting design defects, lighting failures, signage deficiencies, and maintenance records.
  • Challenging fault allocations that insurance companies use to reduce or eliminate your recovery, using physical evidence and accident reconstruction to establish that the other party bore primary responsibility.
  • Identifying all liable parties — including the other driver, the property owner, a property management company, a maintenance contractor, or a security company — to maximize the sources of recovery available to you.
  • Documenting the full scope of your injuries, including delayed-onset conditions like concussions and soft tissue damage that may not be apparent at the scene.

Roden Law handles parking lot and parking garage accident cases on a contingency fee basis, which means you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. There is no upfront cost and no financial risk to you for pursuing your claim.

If you were injured in a parking lot or parking garage accident in Charleston, Mount Pleasant, Summerville, or anywhere in the Lowcountry, call Roden Law at (843) 790-8999 or 1-844-RESULTS for a free consultation. We will review the facts of your accident, identify all parties who may be liable, and explain your legal options at no cost and with no obligation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I file a claim if my accident happened in a private parking lot?

Yes. South Carolina negligence law applies to accidents on private property, including parking lots and parking garages. The at-fault driver owes the same duty of care on private property as on a public road. You can pursue an insurance claim or a personal injury lawsuit for injuries sustained in a private parking lot accident.

What if the police refused to come to my parking lot accident?

If police do not respond, document the scene yourself with photographs, collect the other driver’s information, identify witnesses, and note whether security cameras were present. You can also file a report at the police station after the fact. The absence of a police report does not prevent you from filing an insurance claim or a lawsuit.

Who is at fault when two cars back into each other in a parking lot?

When two vehicles back out of opposing spaces simultaneously and collide, fault is typically shared. Investigators examine how far each vehicle had traveled, whether either driver had a clearer view, and whether either driver could have stopped to avoid the collision. Under South Carolina’s comparative fault rules, each driver’s recovery is reduced by their percentage of fault.

Can I sue the parking garage owner for a dangerous condition?

Yes. If a parking garage or lot owner failed to maintain safe conditions — such as adequate lighting, clear signage, safe ramp design, or properly maintained surfaces — and that failure contributed to your accident, you may have a premises liability claim against the property owner in addition to any claim against the other driver.

How long do I have to file a parking lot accident claim in South Carolina?

The statute of limitations for personal injury claims in South Carolina is three years from the date of the accident (S.C. Code Section 15-3-530). However, if the parking facility is government-owned, shorter notice deadlines may apply under the South Carolina Tort Claims Act. Contact an attorney promptly to ensure you meet all applicable deadlines.

What compensation can I recover after a parking lot accident?

You may recover compensation for medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, property damage, and future medical costs related to your injuries. If the at-fault party’s conduct was reckless — such as driving while intoxicated in a parking lot — you may also be entitled to punitive damages under South Carolina law.

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About the Author

Eric Roden

Founding Partner, CEO