Nebraska MVA Legal Landscape
Key facts for personal injury attorneys buying leads in NE.
Nebraska Crash Statistics
NHTSA FARS 2023 data for NE.
Nebraska recorded 227 traffic fatalities in 2023 according to NHTSA FARS data, making it a lower-volume crash state. The per-capita fatality rate of 11.5 per 100,000 residents is near the national average of 12.9 per 100,000. As an at-fault state with modified 50% bar negligence rules, Nebraska's legal landscape directly affects how attorneys evaluate and convert MVA leads. High-incident areas include I-80 and US-75, where speed, congestion, and rural road conditions contribute to crash frequency.
What You Receive
Every lead includes these intake fields and quality guarantees.
Lead Qualification Criteria
What passes and what gets filtered out before it reaches you.
Qualified Lead
- Physical injury from a motor vehicle accident
- No current attorney representation
- Within Nebraska's 4-year statute of limitations
- Geographic match to your territory
- Reachable by phone or email
- TCPA consent captured at point of intake
- TrustedForm certificate attached
Disqualified
- Property damage only, no physical injury
- Already represented by an attorney
- Accident outside statute of limitations
- Out-of-state or out-of-territory
- Unreachable after 3 contact attempts
Legal Landscape in Nebraska
What PI attorneys need to know about NE tort law.
Tort System
Nebraska follows the traditional at-fault (tort) system for auto accidents. Injured drivers can pursue a claim directly against the at-fault driver or their insurance company. There is no personal injury protection (PIP) threshold to meet before filing a lawsuit. This means every accident with injuries is potentially recoverable through a third-party claim, making Nebraska an active market for MVA lead generation.
Comparative Negligence
Nebraska follows modified comparative negligence with a 50% bar. A plaintiff who is 50% or more at fault cannot recover damages.
Damage Caps
No statutory cap on non-economic damages in personal injury cases. Nebraska does not allow punitive damages in civil cases.
MVA Lead Pricing in Nebraska
Current cost-per-lead ranges for NE MVA leads.
Nebraska's MVA lead pricing falls in the value tier nationally due to lower competition and smaller population centers. The Omaha and Lincoln metro areas command the highest CPLs within the state due to attorney density and advertising competition. Exclusive leads are recommended for firms seeking the highest conversion rates.
Why Firms Buy MVA Leads in Nebraska
What makes NE a strategic market for personal injury firms.
Nebraska's modified comparative negligence system with a 50% bar and at-fault tort structure provide standard case evaluation criteria. No cap on non-economic damages keeps case values competitive. With 227 fatalities in 2023, Nebraska is a smaller market, but consistent I-80 corridor traffic maintains steady crash volume.
I-80 is the dominant crash corridor, carrying heavy coast-to-coast freight traffic through the state. US-75 through Omaha adds urban crash density. Omaha and Lincoln are the primary markets. Nebraska's winter driving conditions, significant agricultural vehicle traffic on rural roads, and position on the I-80 freight corridor all contribute to crash frequency. Lower CPLs in the value tier make Nebraska efficient for firms expanding Midwest coverage.
Compliance & Documentation
Every lead meets these compliance standards before delivery.
Check Nebraska Territory Availability
See if your county or ZIP is open for exclusive lead delivery.
Get NE PricingNebraska MVA Lead FAQ
Common questions about buying MVA leads in NE.
Nebraska uses a modified comparative negligence system with a 50% bar. This means a plaintiff can recover damages as long as their fault does not reach 50%. If the plaintiff is 50% or more at fault, they are completely barred from recovery. Damages are reduced by the plaintiff's percentage of fault. Attorneys buying leads in Nebraska should screen for cases where the client is clearly less than half at fault.
In Nebraska, you have 4 years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury lawsuit. Missing this deadline typically bars you from recovering any compensation. For wrongful death claims, a separate statute may apply. It is important to engage an attorney quickly after an accident to preserve evidence and meet filing deadlines.
Nebraska requires drivers to carry minimum liability coverage of $25,000 per person and $50,000 per accident for bodily injury, plus $25,000 for property damage (25/50/25). Uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage is also required at $25,000 per person. These minimums often fall short of covering serious accident injuries, which is why many MVA cases involve underinsured claims.
Exclusive MVA leads in Nebraska typically range from $150 to $220 per lead, depending on case type, geographic targeting, and lead quality requirements. Live transfer leads range from $330 to $550. Pricing is influenced by the concentration of personal injury firms in the Omaha and Lincoln metro areas and overall demand for cases in the state.
Yes. Claim Supply offers geographic targeting down to the county and zip code level in Nebraska. High-volume areas include the Omaha and Lincoln metropolitan areas. Territory exclusivity ensures your leads are not shared with competing firms in your geographic area, giving you first-mover advantage on every lead.
Related State Guides
Explore MVA lead markets in neighboring and similar states.
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