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NSW CTP accident type guide
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Claims by an at-fault or partly at-fault driver

A driver who may be at fault should not assume there is nothing to claim, and should not assume entitlement either. Some statutory benefits may still be available depending on current law and facts, while damages involve separate fault, injury and eligibility issues.

Quick answer

Get the insurer decision and reasons in writing. Fault labels such as at fault, mostly at fault or partly at fault should be tested against evidence, medical records and the current statutory scheme.

A person calmly reviewing blank claim documents beside a parked right-hand-drive car on an Australian roadside.
The accident layout can affect insurer decisions, fault allegations, evidence priority and the pathway for statutory benefits or a later damages claim.

How this accident occurs

  • A driver loses control, fails to give way, follows too closely or misjudges a road situation.
  • The insurer alleges the injured driver contributed to the crash.
  • There may be shared fault between several drivers or road users.

Who may claim

This page is for injured drivers who are told they may be at fault, mostly at fault or partly at fault. It also assists passengers or other people affected by the same accident to understand why one person’s fault position does not automatically decide every claim.

Realistic examples

  • A single-vehicle crash where the driver is injured.
  • A driver is partly responsible for an intersection collision.
  • An insurer reduces benefits or rejects damages based on alleged contributory negligence.

Common injuries

  • Neck, back, shoulder, knee or head injuries.
  • Psychological symptoms after guilt, shock or serious injury, if medically diagnosed and causally linked.
  • Work capacity issues and treatment needs may still require evidence even where fault is alleged.

Statutory benefits

A statutory benefits claim after claims by an at-fault or partly at-fault driver can seek treatment and care expenses and, where work capacity is affected, weekly payments. These benefits are decided under the NSW motor accident scheme and insurer decisions can be reviewed or disputed. Statutory benefits do not automatically mean a person also has a damages entitlement.

When common law damages may be possible

A common law damages claim after claims by an at-fault or partly at-fault driver is separate from statutory benefits. It may be possible only if the legal requirements are met, including fault, injury classification and other statutory thresholds. The accident type helps identify evidence, but it does not by itself create any entitlement to compensation or damages.

Accident-specific fault issues

  • Whether the insurer’s fault percentage is supported by evidence.
  • Whether another driver, road condition, vehicle defect or sudden event contributed.
  • Whether contributory negligence is alleged and how it affects benefits or damages.
  • Whether statutory benefits and damages are being wrongly treated as the same entitlement.

Evidence to preserve

  • Insurer fault decision, reasons and review documents.
  • Dashcam, police report, witness details and photos of road layout and vehicle positions.
  • Medical certificates, treatment notes and work-capacity evidence.

What to do next

  1. 1

    Ask for the insurer’s fault reasons in writing.

  2. 2

    Preserve accident evidence and medical evidence before review deadlines pass.

  3. 3

    Keep records of income loss, treatment and work capacity.

  4. 4

    Lodge or continue the statutory benefits claim if the scheme applies.

  5. 5

    Seek advice before accepting a fault percentage or damages rejection.

How can a NSW CTP claim be lodged?

A NSW CTP claim is not one single form for every entitlement. Statutory personal injury benefits, common law damages and death-related claims have different approved forms, evidence requirements and legal tests.

  • Statutory personal injury benefits are claimed from the relevant CTP insurer using the current approved Application for Personal Injury Benefits or the NSW Government online claim process. A treating medical practitioner certificate and police event details should be provided where available.
  • A common law damages claim is separate. It uses the current Application for Damages Under Common Law and depends on fault, injury classification and statutory requirements. Receiving statutory benefits does not automatically create a damages entitlement.
  • A claim may be lodged directly with the insurer through accepted channels such as the NSW Government online claims system, an insurer online claim system, or the written approved form sent by email, personal delivery, facsimile or post where available.
  • If a lawyer is instructed, the lawyer can help identify the insurer, prepare the approved forms, gather medical and accident evidence, and lodge the claim or dispute on the client's behalf.
  • Where the registration number is known, insurer details can usually be checked through Service NSW registration information or SIRA CTP Assist. If the vehicle is uninsured or unidentified, the claim may need to proceed through the Nominal Defendant pathway.
  • For a child or a person unable to make the declaration, the approved forms allow an appropriate parent, guardian, relative, friend or legal personal representative to assist or sign, with their relationship and reason for acting identified.
  • If the accident occurred while working, a separate workers compensation claim may also be required and the CTP and workers compensation pathways should be coordinated.
  • CTP covers personal injury or death arising from a motor accident. It does not cover ordinary vehicle repairs or property damage, which usually sit with property damage, comprehensive insurance or other recovery pathways.

Time limits, police reporting and late claims

The current NSW scheme has several different timing rules. The safest approach is to report the accident, obtain medical evidence and lodge the correct claim form as early as possible.

  • Police reporting: the current SIRA personal injury benefits form says the accident must be reported to police within 28 days. A police event number should be provided, but the form also says a claim can still be submitted while that number is being obtained.
  • Statutory benefits: a claim for statutory benefits is generally required within 3 months after the motor accident. A later claim needs a full and satisfactory explanation and must satisfy the Act's late-claim conditions.
  • 28-day significance: if a statutory benefits claim is not made within 28 days, weekly payments are generally not backdated for the period before the claim is made unless the Regulation permits it.
  • Accidents on or after 1 April 2023: backdated weekly payments may still be considered if the claim is made within 3 months and a full and satisfactory explanation is provided. The Regulation sets factors such as awareness of the right to claim, legal incapacity, illness or injury preventing earlier lodgement, and a 14-day deemed-acceptance rule if the insurer does not reject the explanation.
  • Damages: a common law damages claim is generally required within 3 years after the motor accident. A late damages claim requires a full and satisfactory explanation and is assessed separately from any statutory benefits claim.
  • Older scheme: accidents before 1 December 2017 were handled under the previous NSW motor accidents scheme and different forms/time limits, including older six-month claim concepts, may apply. This accident-types cluster is written for the post-1 December 2017 scheme unless a page says otherwise.
  • Review and dispute deadlines can be shorter and decision-specific. Internal review, medical assessment, merit review and PIC steps should be checked as soon as an insurer decision is received.

Common insurer disputes

  • Benefits are stopped or reduced because the driver is alleged to be at fault.
  • The insurer says injuries are threshold injuries or unrelated.
  • A damages claim is rejected because fault or injury requirements are not accepted.
  • The driver accepts an insurer fault decision without review evidence.

FAQs

Can I make a NSW CTP claim for claims by an at-fault or partly at-fault driver?

This page is for injured drivers who are told they may be at fault, mostly at fault or partly at fault. It also assists passengers or other people affected by the same accident to understand why one person’s fault position does not automatically decide every claim.

What fault issues matter for claims by an at-fault or partly at-fault driver?

Whether the insurer’s fault percentage is supported by evidence. Whether another driver, road condition, vehicle defect or sudden event contributed. Whether contributory negligence is alleged and how it affects benefits or damages. Whether statutory benefits and damages are being wrongly treated as the same entitlement.

What evidence should I keep for claims by an at-fault or partly at-fault driver?

Insurer fault decision, reasons and review documents. Dashcam, police report, witness details and photos of road layout and vehicle positions. Medical certificates, treatment notes and work-capacity evidence.

Do statutory benefits automatically mean I can claim damages?

A statutory benefits claim does not automatically create a common law damages entitlement. Damages require separate assessment of fault, injury classification, causation and statutory requirements.

What should I do if the insurer disputes claims by an at-fault or partly at-fault driver?

Benefits are stopped or reduced because the driver is alleged to be at fault. The insurer says injuries are threshold injuries or unrelated. A damages claim is rejected because fault or injury requirements are not accepted. The driver accepts an insurer fault decision without review evidence. Ask for the insurer’s fault reasons in writing. Preserve accident evidence and medical evidence before review deadlines pass. Keep records of income loss, treatment and work capacity. Lodge or continue the statutory benefits claim if the scheme applies. Seek advice before accepting a fault percentage or damages rejection.