T-Bone Accident in Ohio: Fault, Laws, and What to Do (2026)

# T-Bone Accident in Ohio: What You Need to Know

> **KEY FACTS:**
> – Fault depends on who had the **right of way**
> – Ohio’s **51% fault bar** applies
> – File BMV 2367 within **6 days**
> – Distracted driving is a **primary offense** (2023)
> – Minimum insurance: **25/50/25** (increased 2022)

## Fault in Ohio T-Bone Collisions

Right of way determines fault. Common scenarios: running red lights/stop signs, failure to yield on left turns, entering against signals.

### 51% Bar
At 51%+ fault, you recover nothing. In T-bone cases with shared fault (e.g., one driver ran a yellow while the other was speeding), the exact percentage matters.

### Distracted Driving
If the at-fault driver was on their phone at an intersection (violating SB 288), this supports a higher fault allocation.

## What to Do

1. Check for injuries, call 911
2. File **BMV 2367** within **6 days**
3. Document the intersection — signals, cameras, skid marks, witnesses
4. Contact your insurer
5. Seek immediate medical attention

## Common T-Bone Injuries

Head/brain injuries, broken ribs, spinal injuries, internal organ damage. T-bone injuries tend to be severe. Ohio’s increased minimums (25/50/25 since 2022) provide more coverage than the old limits.

## Related Guides

– [What to Do After a Car Accident in Ohio](/ohio/car-accident-guide/)
– [Ohio Car Accident Laws](/ohio/car-accident-laws/)

**DISCLAIMER:** This website is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. This page provides general educational information only. Always consult a licensed attorney in your state for advice specific to your situation. This is not medical advice. If you have been injured, seek immediate medical attention. Last updated: March 2026.

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