(800) 961-8924

Wyoming Pre-Settlement Funding

Injury case stalled out on the high plains? Pull cash from it now, repay only on a win.

Wyoming is wide, windblown, and built on hard work, from the coal mines of the Powder River Basin to the oil and gas fields, the trona mines near Green River, and the ranches that stretch for miles. Add I-80, where high winds flip trucks and winter shuts the road for days, and serious injuries come with the territory. When a case in Laramie, Natrona, or Campbell County takes a year or more, the bills don’t slow down. Wyoming pre-settlement funding helps you hang on. It’s a non-recourse advance on your pending injury claim, repaid only if you win.

✓ No Win, No Repayment

✓ $500 to $250,000+

✓ All WY Case Types

I am a (Select one)

Who Qualifies in Wyoming

Wyoming lawsuit funding rests on three things: a filed injury case, a contingency-fee attorney handling it, and a claim still inside the state’s generous four-year deadline. With those in place, the case carries the rest. Underwriting weighs who caused the harm, the insurance or assets behind the defendant, and how well the injury is documented. Your wages and your credit never enter the picture. Wyoming follows modified comparative fault with a 51% bar, so the likely fault split feeds into the advance. The energy and ranching work that defines the state also produces a lot of claims against parties other than the injured worker’s own employer.

Active Wyoming Filing

A case filed in a Wyoming district court or in the federal District of Wyoming. We fund plaintiffs across the state, from Cheyenne, Casper, and Laramie to Gillette and the energy country, Rock Springs and the trona belt, and the ranch counties beyond.

Contingency Attorney

A Wyoming-licensed attorney is handling your case on contingency. We work through the firm to gather what underwriting needs. Worked here on an energy contract but live elsewhere, or moved away after the injury? You still qualify, as long as a Wyoming lawyer is on the case.

Documented Damages

Liability resting with the other side, medical records that prove the injury, and a defendant with insurance or assets to reach. Under the 51% bar, a minority share of fault still leaves a fundable claim, while crossing that line ends recovery.

Personal Injury Cases We Fund in Wyoming

Energy fields, a windswept interstate, working ranches, and millions of park visitors shape the claims we see here. Six case types come up most across Wyoming.

Energy and Mining Injuries

Accidents in the Powder River Basin coal mines, the oil and gas fields, and the trona mines near Green River. These injuries tend to be severe, and a claim against an at-fault party other than your employer can be funded.

I-80 Trucking and Wind-Related Crashes

I-80 across southern Wyoming is one of the toughest freight corridors in the country, where fierce winds tip over high-profile trucks and winter storms close the road. Multi-vehicle pileups and commercial-truck crashes are common.

Wildlife and Rural Road Crashes

Collisions involving deer, elk, antelope, and moose on long, empty highways, plus the chain-reaction wrecks they trigger. Help can be far off in this country, so injuries are often serious by the time anyone arrives.

Ranch and Agricultural Injuries

Machinery, livestock-handling, and equipment injuries on the cattle and sheep ranches that cover much of the state. When a manufacturer or a company other than your own employer is at fault, the claim can be funded.

Medical Malpractice

Surgical errors, missed diagnoses, and birth injuries at the hospitals in Casper, Cheyenne, and the regional centers that serve a largely rural state. Wyoming routes malpractice claims through a medical review panel before suit.

National Park and Tourism Injuries

Tour bus and shuttle crashes, lodge and resort injuries, and outfitter accidents around Yellowstone, Grand Teton, and Jackson Hole. Millions of visitors a year pass through, and those hurt by negligence can file here.

Get a Wyoming lawsuit advance today

Get Started

Or call toll-free at (800) 961-8924.

Wyoming Pre-Settlement Funding Laws and Regulations

Wyoming is an at-fault tort state with a generous four-year window to file most injury claims. Shared fault runs through a modified comparative rule with a 51% bar. Two features are worth knowing: medical malpractice claims pass through a state review panel before a lawsuit can proceed, and the state’s wide-open distances mean rural crashes often involve delayed emergency response. The summaries below are plain-language background, not legal advice. Your attorney can confirm the deadlines and rules that apply to your case.


Statutes of Limitations

  • Personal injury (general): 4 years, Wyo. Stat. Section 1-3-105 [1]
  • Medical malpractice: 2 years, with a medical review panel step before filing (Wyo. Stat. Section 1-3-107)
  • Wrongful death: 2 years from the date of death
  • Claims against governmental entities under the Wyoming Governmental Claims Act carry their own notice deadlines

Four years is roomy for general injury claims, but malpractice is tighter and adds the review panel up front. That panel takes time, which is part of why funding can help carry a malpractice plaintiff through. Claims against a government body also run on a shorter notice clock, so early legal advice pays off.


Auto Insurance Minimums

  • Bodily injury liability: $25,000 per person / $50,000 per accident [2]
  • Property damage liability: $20,000
  • Wyoming is an at-fault state. There is no mandatory personal injury protection (PIP)
  • Uninsured and underinsured motorist coverage must be offered but can be rejected in writing

Wyoming’s 25/50/20 floor is modest, and a serious crash, especially a commercial-truck wreck on I-80, can blow past it fast. On long rural highways where an at-fault driver may carry only the minimum, keeping UM and UIM coverage can be the difference in a real recovery. Confirm current rules with the Wyoming Department of Transportation.


Modified Comparative Fault

  • Wyoming follows modified comparative fault (Wyo. Stat. Section 1-1-109)
  • A plaintiff recovers only if their fault is not more than 50%
  • Damages are reduced in proportion to the plaintiff’s share of fault
  • At 51% fault or more, recovery is barred entirely

Stay at half or below and you recover, reduced by your share. Cross that line and the claim is gone. Wyoming juries assign each party a percentage, so a clear story of who caused the harm matters. Underwriting sizes the advance around the net figure, which is why cases with fault pointing firmly at the other side carry the most room.

How to Apply for Wyoming Pre-Settlement Funding

The application takes about five minutes, and most Wyoming cases get a decision by the close of the next business day.

1

Reach Out

Use the form above or call (800) 961-8924. Give us your case type, the county where it’s filed, and how to reach your attorney. That’s the whole intake.

2

We Weigh It

We reach your attorney, request the file, and weigh the liability, the available coverage, the documented injuries, and the likely fault split. In most Wyoming cases the answer comes back the day the firm responds.

3

Funds Arrive

Once you and your attorney sign the agreement, the ACH transfer goes out that day. Most Wyoming plaintiffs have the funds available within 24 hours.

Questions from Wyoming Plaintiffs

I was hurt in the oil patch or at a mine. Is there a claim you can fund?

Often, yes, and it turns on who is responsible. Energy and mining sites bring together operators, drilling and service contractors, and equipment suppliers, and an injury frequently traces to a party that isn’t your direct employer. That third-party negligence claim is exactly what we can advance against. The injuries in rig accidents, mine incidents, and equipment failures tend to be severe, which can mean real value. Have your attorney send the filing and the records, and we’ll review the liability and the documented damages.

A truck hit me on I-80 in a windstorm. Is that a strong case to fund?

It can be. I-80 across Wyoming is notorious for high winds and winter pileups, and commercial trucks carry far larger insurance policies than ordinary drivers, so a clear-liability crash with serious injuries can be worth a great deal. Weather alone doesn’t excuse a driver who was going too fast for conditions or a carrier that sent a high-profile rig out into a wind warning. Liability is the key question. If the trucking company or another driver is clearly at fault and your injuries are documented, it’s the kind of case underwriting looks at closely.

I hit an elk on a dark highway. Is anyone at fault in a case like that?

It depends on the facts. A single car striking an animal that darts out, with no other vehicle involved, usually doesn’t give rise to a claim against anyone, so there’s nothing to fund. The picture changes when another party contributed: a driver behind you who slammed into your stopped car, a chain-reaction wreck the animal set off, or a vehicle that swerved into your lane. In those situations there may be a real liability claim against the at-fault driver. If your attorney has identified another responsible party and filed, send it over and we’ll review it.

I got hurt visiting Yellowstone or Jackson Hole. Can I apply from out of state?

Yes. What matters is that the case is filed in Wyoming with a Wyoming attorney, not where you live. The parks and Jackson Hole draw millions of visitors a year, and people get hurt in tour and shuttle crashes, lodge and resort accidents, and outfitter trips. Once your lawyer has the claim on file against the at-fault driver, business, or property owner, you can apply from wherever you are and we’ll send the funds to you there. Keep in mind that injuries inside the national parks can raise questions about federal property, so your attorney will confirm where the claim belongs.

Submit your Wyoming lawsuit loan application today

Get Started

Call toll-free at (800) 961-8924.

Resources

  1. Wyo. Stat. Section 1-3-105: Wyoming four-year personal injury statute of limitations. Source: Wyoming Legislature, wyoleg.gov.
  2. Wyoming auto insurance minimum coverage requirements. Source: Wyoming Department of Transportation, dot.state.wy.us.