Construction work in King of Prussia, PA is everywhere you look. From the new residential communities rising near the Schuylkill River Trail to the ongoing infrastructure projects along U.S. 202 (DeKalb Pike), and the major commercial builds taking shape in Renaissance Park and Moore Park, KOP is one of the most active construction zones in Montgomery County. That activity means more workers on job sites every day, and more chances for something to go wrong. If you or someone you love was hurt on a construction site in or near King of Prussia, a Philadelphia abogado de lesiones personales at MyPhillyLawyer can review your situation and help you understand your options. Our office is located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Call us at (215) 227-2727.

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Why Construction Accident Claims in King of Prussia Are More Complex Than Other Injury Cases

Construction accident cases involve multiple layers of legal responsibility. A single job site may have a general contractor, several subcontractors, a property owner, an equipment manufacturer, and a staffing agency all operating at the same time. Any one of them could share legal responsibility for your injuries.

Pennsylvania follows a modified comparative negligence rule under 42 Pa. C.S. § 7102. This statute bars your recovery only if your own fault exceeds 50 percent. If your share of fault is 50 percent or less, you can still recover damages, but your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. So if a jury finds you 20 percent at fault and awards $200,000, you take home $160,000.

Under that same statute, joint and several liability applies when a single defendant is found responsible for 60 percent or more of the total fault. That means a heavily negligent party can be held responsible for the full damages, not just their proportional share.

Construction sites near Valley Forge National Historical Park, along First Avenue, and throughout the Discovery Labs campus at Renaissance Park are governed by federal OSHA standards and Pennsylvania’s General Safety Law (Act 174). Violations of those standards can serve as strong evidence of negligence in a civil lawsuit. Knowing which parties violated which rules, and how those violations caused your injury, is the core of building a solid claim.

In 2024, the construction sector had the highest number of fatalities among all industries in Pennsylvania, with 48 recorded deaths. That number is not just a statistic. It represents real workers with families who were left to deal with catastrophic losses. If you were injured and survived, the road ahead still involves medical bills, lost wages, and long-term recovery. You deserve to know what legal tools are available to you.

The Most Common Construction Accident Injuries Seen on King of Prussia Job Sites

OSHA identifies four leading causes of construction deaths, commonly called the “Fatal Four.” They are falls, electrocution, struck-by incidents, and caught-in or caught-between accidents. These four hazard types account for a significant share of all construction fatalities nationwide, and they show up on job sites across King of Prussia just as they do anywhere else.

Fatal falls, slips, and trips accounted for 26 percent of Pennsylvania worker fatalities in 2024, a share that was notably higher than the national average of 17 percent. Falls from scaffolding, ladders, rooftops, and elevated platforms are among the most devastating injuries a construction worker can suffer. They often result in traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord damage, and broken bones that require months or years of treatment.

Struck-by accidents happen when a worker is hit by falling tools, swinging crane loads, or moving vehicles on a job site. Active construction corridors along DeKalb Pike and around the King of Prussia Mall area create environments where heavy equipment and foot traffic mix dangerously. These collisions can cause crush injuries, amputations, and fatal head trauma.

Electrocutions remain a serious risk on sites where new electrical infrastructure is being installed alongside existing live wiring. Caught-in and caught-between accidents, such as a worker getting trapped between a machine and a wall, often cause catastrophic internal injuries or amputations.

Under 77 P.S. § 411, Pennsylvania’s Workers’ Compensation Act defines a compensable work injury broadly to include any injury arising in the course of employment. That definition covers all of the injury types listed above. But workers’ compensation is often just the starting point. If a third party, such as a subcontractor or equipment manufacturer, contributed to your injury, you may have additional claims beyond the workers’ comp system.

Workers’ Compensation and Third-Party Claims: How Both Can Apply to Your Case

Most injured construction workers in Pennsylvania are entitled to workers’ compensation benefits under 77 P.S. § 1 et seq., the Pennsylvania Workers’ Compensation Act. This no-fault system pays for medical treatment and a portion of lost wages without requiring you to prove anyone was negligent. Wage loss benefits are calculated at two-thirds (66⅔ percent) of your average weekly wage, subject to a statewide maximum.

Workers’ compensation is valuable, but it has limits. It does not compensate you for pain and suffering, and it does not cover the full value of your lost earning capacity over a lifetime. That is where a third-party personal injury claim becomes critical.

Under 77 P.S. § 671, when a work injury is caused in whole or in part by a third party’s negligence, you have the right to sue that third party directly. This is true even if you are already receiving workers’ compensation benefits. Common third-party defendants in King of Prussia construction accident cases include equipment manufacturers, property owners who created unsafe site conditions, and subcontractors whose crews caused the hazard that injured you.

There is one important wrinkle. Under 77 P.S. § 671, your employer (or their insurance carrier) holds a subrogation lien against any third-party recovery. That means they can seek reimbursement for the workers’ comp benefits they paid out of your lawsuit proceeds. However, the statute also requires that attorney’s fees and litigation costs be shared proportionally between you and the employer, so the lien does not wipe out your recovery. An experienced attorney can help manage that lien and maximize what you keep.

The bottom line is that you do not have to choose between workers’ comp and a third-party lawsuit. You can pursue both at the same time, and doing so often produces a far better financial outcome than either path alone.

The Statute of Limitations for Construction Accident Claims in Pennsylvania

Time is a hard limit in personal injury law. Under 42 Pa. C.S. § 5524, you generally have two years from the date of your injury to file a personal injury lawsuit in Pennsylvania. Miss that deadline and your case is almost certainly gone, regardless of how strong your evidence is.

Two years sounds like a long time. It is not. Construction accident cases require early investigation. Physical evidence on a job site disappears quickly. Scaffolding gets dismantled. Equipment gets repaired or replaced. Witnesses move on to other projects. OSHA inspection reports and site safety logs need to be obtained before they are harder to access. All of that takes time.

There are limited exceptions to the two-year rule. If the injured person was a minor at the time of the accident, the clock typically does not start until they turn 18. In wrongful death cases involving a construction fatality, the family generally has two years from the date of death to file a claim under 42 Pa. C.S. § 8301, Pennsylvania’s Wrongful Death Act. That statute allows eligible survivors to recover economic damages including medical expenses, funeral costs, and loss of financial support.

Do not wait to find out which deadline applies to your situation. Since 2010, more than $9 billion has been invested in development projects and commercial real estate transactions in King of Prussia alone, which means there is no shortage of active job sites and ongoing construction activity where accidents can and do happen. The sooner you contact MyPhillyLawyer, the sooner we can begin preserving the evidence that supports your claim. Call us at (215) 227-2727 or toll free at 866-352-4572.

What Damages Can You Recover After a King of Prussia Construction Accident?

A successful construction accident lawsuit in Pennsylvania can recover two broad categories of damages: economic and non-economic. Economic damages are the measurable financial losses tied directly to your injury. Non-economic damages compensate for the human cost of what happened to you.

Economic damages typically include all past and future medical expenses, lost wages from time missed at work, and reduced earning capacity if your injuries prevent you from returning to your former job or trade. For a skilled construction worker, the loss of the ability to work in their field can represent hundreds of thousands of dollars in future income.

Non-economic damages cover pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of enjoyment of life, and in some cases, loss of consortium for a spouse. Pennsylvania law does not cap non-economic damages in most construction accident cases, which means the full scope of your suffering can be presented to a jury.

In cases involving extreme misconduct, such as a contractor who knowingly ignored OSHA fall protection requirements on a site near the Schuylkill River Trail, punitive damages may also be available. These are designed to punish egregious behavior, not just compensate the victim.

If a construction worker was killed on the job, the family may bring a wrongful death claim under 42 Pa. C.S. § 8301 and a survival action under Pennsylvania law. These claims allow the family to recover for the financial and emotional losses caused by the death, including the loss of the worker’s future earnings, companionship, and guidance. Cases involving workplace fatalities are among the most serious matters we handle, and families deserve to have every legal option explained to them clearly and honestly.

Why You Should Contact MyPhillyLawyer After a King of Prussia Construction Accident

MyPhillyLawyer is a personal injury law firm based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. We handle serious injury cases for clients throughout the greater Philadelphia region, including those injured on construction sites in King of Prussia and the surrounding areas of Montgomery County. We are not certified as specialists in any particular field of law, but construction accident and personal injury claims are a principal part of our practice.

When you call us, you get a real conversation about your situation, not a sales pitch. We will tell you honestly what we think your case involves and what the legal process looks like. We work on a contingency fee basis in personal injury cases, which means you pay no attorney’s fees unless we recover money for you. If there is no recovery, there is no fee. Please note that you may still be responsible for certain case expenses depending on the outcome, and we will explain those details to you clearly at the start.

King of Prussia is one of the most active development zones in the entire Philadelphia region. New projects like the Life Time Living wellness-focused residential community, which broke ground in King of Prussia in 2025, are just one example of the large-scale construction activity that brings hundreds of workers to job sites across Upper Merion Township every week. Where there is construction, there is risk. Where there is risk and negligence, there is a legal claim.

If you were hurt on a construction site in King of Prussia, or anywhere in Montgomery County, do not try to handle the insurance companies or your employer on your own. Call MyPhillyLawyer at (215) 227-2727 or toll free at Toll Free: 866-352-4572. We are ready to listen.

FAQs About King of Prussia Construction Accident Claims

Can I sue my employer if I was hurt on a construction site in King of Prussia?

In most cases, Pennsylvania’s Workers’ Compensation Act is your exclusive remedy against your direct employer. That means you generally cannot sue your employer in civil court for a work injury. However, you can still file a workers’ compensation claim for medical benefits and wage loss, and you can separately sue any third party whose negligence contributed to your injury, such as a subcontractor, equipment manufacturer, or property owner. Under 77 P.S. § 671, both paths can be pursued at the same time.

What if I was partially at fault for my construction accident?

Pennsylvania’s comparative negligence law under 42 Pa. C.S. § 7102 allows you to recover damages even if you were partially at fault, as long as your share of fault does not exceed 50 percent. If you were 30 percent at fault and your total damages are $300,000, you would recover $210,000. Only if a jury finds you more than 50 percent responsible would your claim be completely barred.

How long do I have to file a construction accident lawsuit in Pennsylvania?

The general statute of limitations for personal injury claims in Pennsylvania is two years from the date of the accident, under 42 Pa. C.S. § 5524. In a wrongful death case, the family typically has two years from the date of death to file. There are limited exceptions for minors and certain discovery-based claims. Missing this deadline almost always ends your ability to recover compensation, so contacting an attorney as early as possible is important.

What is the difference between workers’ compensation and a third-party construction accident claim?

Workers’ compensation under 77 P.S. § 1 et seq. is a no-fault system that pays for your medical care and a portion of your lost wages (66⅔ percent of your average weekly wage) without requiring proof of negligence. A third-party personal injury claim, filed against someone other than your direct employer, requires proving negligence but can recover a much broader range of damages, including pain and suffering and full lost wages. Both claims can be active at the same time, though your employer may have a lien on your third-party recovery under 77 P.S. § 671.

What should I do immediately after a construction accident in King of Prussia?

Report the injury to your supervisor as soon as possible. Under Pennsylvania law, you must report your injury within 120 days to protect your workers’ compensation eligibility. Seek medical attention right away, even if the injury seems minor at first. Document everything you can, including the condition of the site, the equipment involved, and the names of any witnesses. Preserve any photos or videos you have access to. Then contact a personal injury attorney before speaking with any insurance adjuster, because statements you make early in the process can affect your claim.

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