Key Facts — At a Glance
Time Limit
3 years from date of accident
Time Limit
£1,200 – £24,000+
Time Limit
6 – 14 months
Time Limit
£0 · No Win No Fee
Written by
Faizan
Every guide we publish is verified against UK statute and current case law before release. Read our editorial standards →
Table of Contents
If you crash a company vehicle that you were driving for work, you may still be entitled to claim compensation for personal injury, lost income and treatment costs — even if you were partially at fault. Liability usually sits with the employer’s insurer when the vehicle was being used in the course of your employment. Report the incident, gather evidence and speak to a solicitor before signing anything from your employer or their insurer.
Crashing a vehicle you don’t personally own can be stressful — and when that vehicle belongs to your employer, the rules around fault, insurance and compensation work differently from a standard road traffic accident. This guide walks through who’s liable, what you can recover, and what to do in the hours, days and weeks after the incident.
Whether you drive a van for a delivery company, a pool car between sites, or a HGV across the country, the same principle applies: if you were injured while doing your job, you have the right to seek advice and pursue a claim without putting your employment at risk.
Below we’ll break the topic down section by section, starting with the definition of a “company vehicle” in legal terms, then moving through liability, eligibility, timelines and the practical steps you should take next.
What Counts as a Company Vehicle Crash?
A crash involving any vehicle owned, leased or hired by your employer, where the collision happens while you are acting in the course of your employment.
Definition
Vicarious liability
The legal principle that an employer is responsible for the actions of an employee carried out in the course of their employment — including road traffic incidents.
A “company vehicle” is any vehicle owned, leased or provided by your employer for work use. That includes pool cars, branded vans, HGVs, taxis on a fleet policy and, in some cases, your own car when claimed through a mileage scheme. A crash qualifies as a company vehicle accident when the collision happens while you are acting in the course of your employment.
- Driving between client sites, depots or branches
- Making deliveries or collections on a scheduled route
- Driving a colleague or passenger for business purposes
- Parking, manoeuvring or refuelling during a working shift
Commuting to and from your usual place of work does not normally count — unless your role specifically requires you to start work the moment you get behind the wheel.
Related Internal Guides
- No Win No Fee Explained
- Pool Car Insurance Basics
- Reporting a Workplace Accident
- Time Limits for RTA Claims
How the Claim Process Works
Four steps: report the incident within 24 hours, seek medical attention within 48 hours, preserve evidence in the first week, and instruct a solicitor before responding to your employer’s insurer.
1. Report the Incident
Notify your line manager and your employer’s insurer in writing within 24 hours. Record the time, location, weather and the contact details of any other drivers or witnesses. A short factual statement is enough at this stage.
2. Seek Medical Attention
Even if injuries seem minor, attend A&E or a GP within the first 48 hours. Soft-tissue injuries like whiplash often present late and your medical record becomes the backbone of any future claim.
3. Preserve Evidence
Take photos of damage, road conditions and any visible injuries. Request copies of the dashcam footage, vehicle telematics report and the company’s accident book entry. Don’t sign anything that admits fault.
4. Speak to a Solicitor
A specialist road traffic solicitor will review liability, advise on protected disclosures under the Employment Rights Act, and handle correspondence with your employer’s insurer on your behalf.
| Stage | Action | Typical Timing | Who Leads |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Report | Inform line manager & insurer; record details | Within 24 hrs | You |
| 2. Medical | Attend A&E or GP; obtain written record | 24 – 48 hrs | You |
| 3. Evidence | Photos, dashcam, telematics, witness statements | Days 1 – 7 | Joint |
| 4. Instruct | Speak to a specialist solicitor; sign CFA | Days 3 – 14 | Solicitor |
| 5. Letter of Claim | Formal claim sent to defendant insurer | Days 14 – 30 | Solicitor |
Even strong claims can be weakened by small missteps in the first few weeks. Watch out for these recurring issues we see on intake.
Acting within the first week dramatically improves the strength of your claim. Insurers weigh delayed reporting heavily, even when the underlying facts are clear. Get medical evidence early and don’t let your employer pressure you into a verbal settlement.
“You are not asking for a favour. Employer’s liability insurance exists precisely for moments like this — and using it does not put your job at risk.”
— James Sutherland,
Senior Solicitor
Who Can Make a Claim?
Short answer
Any employee, contractor or agency worker injured in a company vehicle within the last three years, where the journey was made in the course of employment.
You may be eligible if:
- The crash happened during work hours or on a work journey
- You were driving with your employer’s express or implied permission
- You suffered a physical or psychological injury, however minor
- The incident occurred in the last three years
| Scenario | Eligible to Claim? | Who Pays | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Driving a company van mid-shift | ✓ Yes | Employer's motor insurer | Strongest claim category |
| Pool car on client visit | ✓ Yes | Employer's motor insurer | Keep diary/route evidence |
| Own car claimed via mileage | Likely | Your insurer + employer | Check business-use cover |
| Commuting to office | Usually not | Your own insurer | Standard RTA rules apply |
| Unauthorised personal use | No | You (potential breach) | Speak to a solicitor first |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Short answer
The five most damaging errors: admitting fault verbally, accepting an early settlement, posting on social media, skipping medical follow-ups, and discarding receipts.
Even strong claims can be weakened by small missteps in the first few weeks. Watch out
for these recurring issues we see on intake.
- Admitting fault verbally at the scene or to your employer’s insurer
- Accepting an early settlement before the full medical picture is known
- Posting on social media about the incident or your injuries
- Skipping medical follow-ups — gaps in treatment reduce damages
- Throwing away receipts for travel to appointments, medication or equipment
How Long Does It Take?
Short answer
Most company vehicle claims settle in 6 to 14 months. Whiplash-only claims often resolve in under 6 months via the Official Injury Claim portal.
Most company vehicle claims settle within 6 to 14 months. Simpler whiplash claims under the Official Injury Claim portal often complete in under six months. Cases involving serious injury, contested liability or psychological harm can run longer — sometimes into a second year — because they require fuller medical evidence and, occasionally, court directions.
Industry Insight
Average settlement times for occupational RTA claims have shortened by 18% since the Civil Liability Act portal reforms came into force, but contested cases now sit in a longer tail. Insurers are increasingly using telematics and dashcam data as their first line of evidence — which works both ways for a careful claimant.
Source: Association of British Insurers, Motor Claims Review 2025
Average settlement times for occupational RTA claims have shortened by 18% since the Civil Liability Act portal reforms came into force, but contested cases now sit in a longer tail. Insurers are increasingly using telematics and dashcam data as their first line of evidence — which works both ways for a careful claimant.
Compensation You May Be Owed
Short answer
Compensation typically ranges from £1,200 for mild whiplash to £24,000+ for serious injury with loss of earnings, set against the Judicial College Guidelines 16th Edition (2025).
Definition
General vs. special damages
General damages compensate for the injury itself (pain, suffering, loss of amenity).
Special damages reimburse documented financial losses — wages, treatment, travel
and equipment.
Damages are split into two categories: general damages (for the injury itself, including pain, suffering and loss of amenity) and special damages (financial losses you can evidence with receipts and payslips).
£1,200–£4,200
Whiplash (up to 24 months)
£8,500–£21,000
Moderate back injury
£24k+
Serious injury & loss of earnings
| Injury Type | Severity | Typical Range | Recovery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whiplash | Mild – Moderate | £240 – £4,215 | Up to 24 months |
| Neck injury | Moderate | £7,890 – £24,990 | 2 – 5 years |
| Back injury | Moderate | £12,510 – £27,760 | 2+ years |
| Shoulder / arm | Moderate | £7,890 – £12,240 | 1 – 2 years |
| Psychological harm | Moderate | £5,860 – £19,070 | Variable |
| Loss of earnings | — | 100% of net loss | Until return to work |
Figures are indicative and based on the 16th edition of the Judicial College Guidelines. Every claim is assessed on its own facts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my employer fire me for making a claim?
No. Dismissing or disciplining an employee for pursuing a legitimate personal injury claim is automatically unfair under the Employment Rights Act 1996. Most claims are handled entirely through the insurer with no impact on day-to-day employment.
What if the crash was partly my fault?What if the crash was partly my fault?
You can still claim. The award is reduced by the percentage of contributory negligence — for example, if liability is split 70/30 in your favour, you receive 70% of the assessed damages.
Do I have to pay anything upfront?
No. Almost all road traffic claims are run on a No Win No Fee basis. If your claim is unsuccessful, you pay nothing for our work, provided you’ve complied with the conditional fee agreement.
What if my employer doesn't have valid insurance?
Driving an uninsured company vehicle is the employer’s responsibility, not yours. The Motor Insurers’ Bureau (MIB) provides a fallback scheme for victims of uninsured drivers — your solicitor will handle the MIB application.
How is my claim valued?
An independent medical expert provides a written prognosis. We combine that with your documented financial losses (lost income, treatment, travel) and compare to the Judicial College Guidelines and recent comparable settlements to arrive at a valuation.
Recent Settlements — Company Vehicle Claims
Anonymised case outcomes secured by our RTA team in the last 12 months. Past results are not a guarantee of future outcomes.
Delivery Driver · M6
£28,400
Rear-end collision in company van. Moderate back & neck injury, 8 months off work. Settled in 9 months.
Pool-Car Driver · Manchester
£11,750
Whiplash and shoulder injury after side-impact at junction. Liability admitted; settled in 7 months.
Delivery Driver · M6
£28,400
Serious knee & psychological injury after roll-over. Contested liability resolved at 14 months.
Summary
A crash in a company vehicle does not strip you of your right to claim — in many cases it strengthens it, because employer’s liability and motor insurance both come into play. The most important steps are practical, not legal: report the incident in writing, get a medical record on file within 48 hours, and speak to a specialist solicitor before agreeing anything with your employer or their insurer.
Liability is rarely binary. Even where an employee shares some fault, contributory negligence simply adjusts the award — it does not extinguish the claim. The three-year limitation period runs from the date of the accident, but cases gathered fresh from the scene always settle for more, with fewer disputes.
Key Takeaways
- Liability usually attaches to the employer's motor insurer, not you personally
- Report and document the incident within 24 – 48 hours
- You have three years from the accident date to bring a claim
- Contributory fault reduces, but rarely eliminates, compensation
- Claims do not jeopardise employment — protections are statutory
What You Should Do Next
If you believe your situation may involve a company vehicle claim, the next steps are simple and free:
- Document Everything — record the date, location and circumstances of the incident, plus any witnesses or third parties involved.
- Gather Supporting Evidence — collect medical notes, photographs, dashcam clips, telematics reports and the accident-book entry.
- Assess Liability Early — identify any other parties (other drivers, contractors, manufacturers) who may share responsibility.
- Understand Your Timeline — note the three-year limitation period and key insurer response windows.
Taking the Next Step
If you’ve been injured in a company vehicle, our solicitors can review your situation in a free, no-obligation call. We work on a No Win No Fee basis — you only pay if we recover damages for you.
The earlier you speak to us, the more we can do. Evidence is freshest, witnesses are reachable, and insurers respond more quickly when correspondence opens within days rather than months.
Editorial review: This guide was independently reviewed by Priya Nair (SRA 549110), Head of Legal Editorial, on 12 May 2026 and verified against the Judicial College Guidelines 16th Edition, the Civil Liability Act 2018, and the most recent ABI Motor Claims Review. We update this article whenever case law or statute affects the guidance.
Sources & References
- Judicial College Guidelines for the Assessment of General Damages in Personal Injury Cases, 16th Edition (Oxford University Press, 2025) — used for all indicative compensation bands cited above.
- Limitation Act 1980, s.11 — establishes the three-year limitation period for personal injury claims in England & Wales. legislation.gov.uk
- Association of British Insurers, “Motor Claims Review 2025” (ABI Statistical Bulletin, March 2025) — source of settlement-time figures.
- Civil Liability Act 2018 and the Whiplash Reform Programme, Ministry of Justice (May 2021, updated 2025). gov.uk
- Employment Rights Act 1996, s.100 — protection from dismissal for asserting statutory rights, including health-and-safety-related claims.
- Motor Insurers’ Bureau, Uninsured Drivers Agreement 2015 — fallback scheme for victims of uninsured drivers. mib.org.uk
- Solicitors Regulation Authority Handbook, Code of Conduct for Solicitors (Version 12, 2024). sra.org.uk
Glossary of Key Terms
- CFA (Conditional Fee Agreement)
- A "No Win No Fee" arrangement — your solicitor is paid only if your claim succeeds.
- Contributory Negligence
- The legal principle that reduces damages when the claimant is partly at fault.
- Letter of Claim
- The formal opening document sent to the defendant's insurer setting out liability and injury.
- OIC Portal
- The Official Injury Claim service for low-value whiplash and RTA claims under £5,000.
- Pre-Action Protocol
- Procedural rules claimants and insurers must follow before any court proceedings begin.
- Quantum
- The total monetary value of a claim, combining general and special damages.
- Telematics
- Vehicle data (speed, braking, GPS) recorded by an in-cab device — often pivotal evidence.
- Vicarious Liability
- An employer's legal responsibility for an employee's actions in the course of employment.