Fatal motor accidents and compensation-to-relatives claims
After a fatal motor accident, different people may need different advice. Injured witnesses, close relatives, dependants and estates may have different entitlements and claim pathways. This page avoids fixed categories or amounts because the correct path depends on the facts and current law.
Identify who is seeking advice and in what capacity before lodging documents. A witness psychological injury claim, a compensation-to-relatives pathway, a dependency issue and an estate issue are not the same thing.

How this accident occurs
- A person dies because of injuries from a NSW motor accident.
- Family members need advice about death-related claim pathways.
- A separate psychological injury, dependency or estate issue may also arise.
Who may claim
People who may need advice include injured witnesses, close relatives, dependants, estate representatives and people asked to provide documents. The right pathway depends on relationship, financial circumstances, accident evidence, medical evidence and the role in which the person is claiming.
Realistic examples
- A dependant needs advice about financial consequences after a fatal crash.
- A close relative also has a diagnosed psychological injury from the event.
- An estate representative receives insurer forms and is unsure which claim pathway applies.
Common injuries
- The deceased person’s injuries and cause of death must be evidenced.
- A separate claimant may also have diagnosed psychological injury requiring medical evidence.
- Dependency, estate and related issues usually require documents beyond medical records.
Statutory benefits
A statutory benefits claim after fatal motor accidents and compensation-to-relatives claims 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 fatal motor accidents and compensation-to-relatives claims 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 fatal accident was caused by fault of an insured vehicle or another relevant pathway.
- Whether contributory negligence is alleged against the deceased or another person.
- Whether different claimants are pursuing different entitlements from the same accident.
- Whether insurer forms correctly match the person’s legal role.
Evidence to preserve
- Police and official accident material, death certificate and cause-of-death evidence.
- Relationship, dependency, estate authority and financial documents where relevant.
- Medical evidence for any separate psychological injury claim.
What to do next
- 1
Identify each person who may need advice and their role.
- 2
Do not assume one form or one insurer explanation covers every entitlement.
- 3
Collect official accident, medical, relationship, dependency and estate documents carefully.
- 4
Ask for legal advice before signing releases or settlement documents.
- 5
Act promptly so claim, review and dispute steps are not missed.
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
- The insurer asks the wrong person for documents or treats different pathways as one claim.
- Fault, causation or contributory negligence is disputed.
- Dependency, relationship or representative status is unclear.
- A psychological injury claim and death-related claim are confused.
FAQs
Do all relatives have the same claim after a fatal motor accident?
No. Injured witnesses, close relatives, dependants and estates may have different pathways. The correct pathway depends on the person’s role, evidence and current law.
Are fixed compensation amounts listed on this page?
No. The page does not state set figures. The evidence, relationship, dependency, estate issues and statutory pathway need legal assessment.
What documents are usually important after a fatal motor accident?
Police and official accident material, death certificate and cause-of-death evidence. Relationship, dependency, estate authority and financial documents where relevant. Medical evidence for any separate psychological injury claim.
Can a psychological injury claim run beside a death-related pathway?
Sometimes more than one pathway needs assessment. They should not be treated as the same claim without advice.
What disputes are common after fatal motor accidents?
The insurer asks the wrong person for documents or treats different pathways as one claim. Fault, causation or contributory negligence is disputed. Dependency, relationship or representative status is unclear. A psychological injury claim and death-related claim are confused. Identify each person who may need advice and their role. Do not assume one form or one insurer explanation covers every entitlement. Collect official accident, medical, relationship, dependency and estate documents carefully. Ask for legal advice before signing releases or settlement documents. Act promptly so claim, review and dispute steps are not missed.