What we do for Hawaii matters
1. Document the incident
We guide you through a calm intake covering what happened, who was involved, and what medical care or wage loss followed. Forms mode or conversational mode, in English or Spanish, on your timeline.
2. Build the case packet
Your matter compiles automatically into a structured attorney-ready packet: incident summary, medical timeline, evidence index, deadline alerts, and red flags. You see what is missing before an attorney does.
3. Connect to a verified attorney
When the packet is ready, we route it to a verified personal-injury attorney licensed in Hawaii. Consultations are typically free. You decide whether to engage.
Deadline math we run for you
We track the 24-month general PI window for your matter automatically and surface government-claim notice periods when a state or municipal entity is involved. You do not have to remember the dates; the platform does.
Verified attorney handoff
We route Hawaii matters to verified personal-injury attorneys for review. We are not a referral mill; we send organized packets to a curated panel. If we cannot match a verified attorney in your state, we tell you and help you find one through your state bar's referral service.
Comparative negligence
Verify with a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.
Start your recovery
Document the incident, organize medical and wage-loss records, and route the matter to a licensed personal-injury attorney when ready.
Continue reading
We wrote a deep-dive on theHawaii Personal Injury Statute of Limitations: 2026 Window, the PIP Tort Threshold, and Common Pitfalls. Plain-English, primary-source citations, last verified within the year.
What to do in the first 72 hours after a Hawaii PI incident
- Seek medical attention if you have not already. Even an "I feel fine" walk-in note is useful documentation when symptoms surface days later.
- Photograph everything that will not survive cleanup: vehicles, the scene, the ground, your injuries. Note the time and location on each shot.
- Write down what happened while it is fresh. The details that feel obvious now (weather, lane position, who said what) fade within a week.
- Save the police or incident report number, the names and contact information of any witnesses, and the insurance information you exchanged.
- Do not give a recorded statement to the other party's insurance carrier yet. Their adjuster will call quickly; a calm "I will follow up in writing" is enough.
- Track your out-of-pocket expenses (medical co-pays, missed work, ride-share to appointments) in one place from day one.
- Open a matter in the Recovery Center. We organize the documentation, surface the Hawaii statute of limitations window, and route you to a verified attorney when the case warrants it.
This is general information about steps that documented Hawaii personal injury matters tend to take. It is not legal advice for your specific situation.
Informational only
LawSensai is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. The information, AI summaries, and document organization tools in the Personal Injury Recovery Center help you understand your situation and prepare to speak with an attorney. They are not a substitute for a licensed attorney's advice on your specific case.
No attorney-client relationship is created unless you sign an engagement letter with an attorney. Case Readiness Scores describe how well your case is documented, not how much money it may recover or whether you have a valid legal claim. Settlement offer summaries describe what the document says; they never tell you whether to accept or reject an offer.
Deadlines, damages, and procedural rules vary by state and case type. Discuss your specific situation with a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.
This page is informational scaffolding sourced from our state-rules registry. It is not legal advice. Deadlines, exceptions, and case-specific rules vary. Verify your specific situation with a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction before relying on any window.


