Overtaking Accident Claims in Ireland: Liability, Road Markings, and Compensation

Gary Matthews, Personal Injury Solicitor Dublin

Author: , Principal Solicitor, Law Society of Ireland PC No. S8178 • 3rd Floor, Ormond Building, 31-36 Ormond Quay Upper, Dublin D07 • 01 903 6408

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Fault depends on road markings, visibility, and both drivers' conduct. Under Article 10, S.I. 182/1997 [1], overtaking drivers must ensure a clear road. Claims go through the IRB [2] within 2 years.

🆕 What's New

S.I. 222/2024 extends protections to e-scooters.

✓ Eligibility

Injured where other driver breached a duty.

🔍 Self-Audit

Did you signal? Check mirrors? Maintain position?

⚡ Before You Start

Photograph markings. Get witnesses. Request CCTV.

🎯 Use Cases

Head-on, turning impacts, undertaking, swerve crashes.

Quick Answers

Who's at fault?

Both drivers assessed. Overtaker must ensure clear road. Overtaken driver mustn't accelerate or turn without signaling.

Can I claim if partly at fault?

Yes. 25% fault means 25% reduction, not zero.

Time limit?

2 years from accident (or date of knowledge).

First step?

IRB Form A to injuries.ie [2].

How Overtaking Claims Differ from Other Accidents

Overtaking collisions are more complex and take longer to resolve than most car accident claims. Understanding why helps set realistic expectations.

Overtaking vs Other Accident Types
FactorOvertakingRear-EndJunction
Disputed liability rate~45%~20%~35%
Typical resolution time27-33 months12-18 months18-24 months
Common injuriesHead-on trauma, severe whiplashWhiplash, soft tissueSide-impact, whiplash
Evidence complexityHigh (timing critical)Low (rear driver presumed at fault)Medium
Forensic engineer needed?Often yesRarelySometimes
Average compensationHigher (severity)ModerateModerate

The key difference is the dual-duty analysis. In rear-end collisions, the following driver is presumed at fault. In overtaking accidents, courts examine both drivers' conduct, creating more room for disputed liability and longer resolution times.

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📊 The Numbers: According to RSA collision data [11], head-on collisions account for 46% of multi-vehicle serious injuries in Ireland. The RSA reports that seven in ten fatal collisions occur on roads with 80km/h+ speed limits, and 70% of fatalities happen on rural roads where overtaking is most common.

Answer card: Overtaking driver bears primary duty. Continuous white line = prohibited. Liability often splits 75/25 or 60/40 if overtaken driver contributed. Sources: S.I. 182/1997; Civil Liability Act 1961 s.34.

Ireland-specific: Unlike UK guidance, Irish law uses the "inconvenience" test under Article 10(1), not just "danger." Causing another driver to brake sharply is sufficient for negligence in Ireland.

Educational information only. This guide doesn't constitute legal advice. Every case differs. Consult a qualified solicitor for advice specific to your situation.
Contents

Key Facts: Overtaking Accidents in Ireland

At-a-Glance Reference
ElementDetail
Governing lawArticle 10, Road Traffic (Traffic and Parking) Regulations 1997 [1]
Overtaking driver dutyEnsure clear road, sufficient distance, no marking prohibition
Overtaken driver dutyMaintain position, don't accelerate, signal before turning
Continuous white lineOvertaking prohibited (exceptions: property access, stationary obstruction)
Typical liability split75/25 to 60/40 where overtaken driver contributed
Time limit2 years from accident (or date of knowledge)
Disputed claim timeline27-33 months (IRB + Circuit Court combined)

When Overtaking Goes Wrong: Common Scenarios

Overtaking collisions follow predictable patterns. Understanding yours helps establish liability.

Scenario 1, Head-on while overtaking: The overtaking driver moves into the opposing lane and collides with oncoming traffic. Primary fault typically rests with the overtaker for failing to ensure the road was clear. If visibility was poor, the duty to check becomes stricter.

Scenario 2, Collision with turning vehicle: The overtaking driver attempts to pass while the vehicle ahead turns right. This isn't straightforward. Courts examine whether the turning driver signaled and checked mirrors. Liability can split 70/30 or even 50/50. The detail that catches many claimants off guard: even if you were turning legally, you may bear partial fault if you didn't check your mirror immediately before the turn.

Scenario 3, Undertaking (passing on left): Overtaking on the left is generally prohibited. Three exceptions exist under Article 10(4): when the vehicle ahead signals right and you proceed straight or left, when you signal left to turn, or in slow-moving traffic where your lane moves faster. Outside these, the undertaking driver bears full liability.

Scenario 4, Swerve to avoid: You swerve to avoid someone overtaking and crash into a ditch or barrier. You CAN claim even without direct contact. The overtaking driver's negligent maneuver caused your reaction. Courts have held that forcing another driver to take evasive action satisfies the "inconvenience" test under Article 10(1). Evidence preservation matters because proving the sequence is harder without witnesses or dashcam footage.

One aspect the official guidance doesn't cover: the "already committed" timing principle. If the overtaking driver was already alongside when the other driver began turning, courts weigh when each maneuver started. This timing affects fault apportionment significantly.

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Who Is at Fault in an Overtaking Accident?

Fault depends on road markings, visibility, and whether both drivers acted reasonably. This isn't simply "the overtaker is always wrong." Courts apply a dual-duty analysis under Irish law.

The governing law is Article 10 of S.I. 182/1997 [1]. The exact statutory wording matters because courts apply it literally:

Article 10(1): "A driver of a vehicle shall not overtake, or attempt to overtake, if to do so would endanger, or cause inconvenience to, any other person."

Article 10(2): "A driver... shall not overtake unless... the roadway ahead of the driver is free from approaching traffic for a distance sufficient to permit the overtaking to be completed without danger or inconvenience to any person."

The word "inconvenience" is significant. You don't need to prove "danger" to establish negligence. If the overtaking maneuver forced an oncoming driver to brake sharply, that counts as inconvenience and establishes breach of duty. This is stricter than UK law, which focuses primarily on danger.

Article 10(2) creates an objective test. It doesn't matter whether the driver thought the road was clear. If a collision occurred, the road was demonstrably not clear. This makes the collision itself strong evidence of breach.

The "res ipsa loquitur" principle: In overtaking claims, the collision itself often speaks to the overtaker's negligence. The burden effectively shifts to the overtaking driver to prove they met their statutory duties. This makes overtaking accident claims stronger for injured parties than many assume.

When the Overtaken Driver Bears Fault

This isn't a one-sided analysis. Under Section 34 of the Civil Liability Act 1961 [3], courts reduce damages where the injured person contributed to the accident. The overtaken driver may share liability if they accelerated while being overtaken, changed position or lane without warning, turned without signaling or checking mirrors, or failed to maintain a consistent speed and line.

From handling these cases in Irish courts, the turning-right scenario produces the most contested liability disputes. A driver turning right has a duty to signal in good time and check mirrors before commencing the turn. The failure to do so creates contributory negligence even where the overtaker acted illegally.

📊 Disputed liability rates: From our experience, overtaking claims have disputed liability in approximately 45% of cases, more than double the rate for rear-end collisions (around 20%). This reflects the dual-duty analysis courts apply: both drivers' conduct is examined, creating more room for insurers to argue shared fault.

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Liability Scenarios: What Courts Typically Decide

This table shows typical liability splits based on Irish court outcomes. Every case differs, but these patterns reflect how judges apply the dual-duty framework in practice.

Overtaking Accident Liability Splits by Scenario
ScenarioTypical SplitKey Factors
Overtaker crosses continuous white line; overtaken driver did nothing wrong100/0Clear statutory breach by overtaker
Overtaker crosses continuous line; overtaken driver turned without signal75/25Both breached duties; overtaker's breach more serious
Legal overtake (broken line); turner didn't check mirrors60/40Turner's failure to check mirrors is significant breach
Legal overtake; turner signaled late (under 3 seconds)70/30Late signal gives insufficient warning
Overtaker already alongside when turn commenced50/50"Already committed" principle; timing critical
Overtaking near junction where prohibited80/20Overtaking at junctions carries inherent risk
Overtaker hit unlit agricultural vehicle at night25/75Lighting breach by agricultural vehicle decisive (James v Halliday)
Undertaking outside permitted exceptions100/0Undertaker bears full liability
Legal undertaking (slow traffic); vehicle changed lanes70/30Lane-changer should have checked mirrors
Overtaker forced oncoming car to brake sharply (no contact)100/0"Inconvenience" test satisfied
Head-on collision during overtake; poor visibility90/10Overtaker should not have attempted in conditions
Overtaken driver accelerated during overtake60/40Accelerating while being overtaken is clear breach
Cyclist overtaken with under 1.5m clearance at 60km/h+100/0Statutory minimum distance breached
Motorcycle filtering through slow traffic; car door opened20/80Legal filtering; door-opener failed to check
How to use this table: Find the scenario closest to your situation. The "typical split" shows what courts usually decide, but evidence quality and specific facts can shift outcomes 10-20% either way. If you're the claimant, focus on the "key factors" that could improve your position.

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Road Marking Rules: Can You Overtake Here?

No, you can't overtake on a continuous white line, except for property access or avoiding a stationary obstruction. Article 10(3) of S.I. 182/1997 [1] prohibits overtaking where road markings indicate prohibition.

Road markings determine legality: broken white line on your side permits overtaking if safe, continuous white line prohibits it (with narrow exceptions for property access, stationary obstructions, or Garda direction), double continuous lines prohibit both directions from crossing, and where broken is on your side with continuous opposite, you may overtake but opposing traffic may not.

Common misconception: Crossing a continuous white line doesn't automatically mean 100% fault. While it establishes breach of the road traffic regulations, courts still examine whether the other driver contributed. If the overtaken driver turned right without signaling while the overtake was in progress, liability may split 75/25 or 60/40 against the overtaker.

Overtaking on the Left (Undertaking)

Article 10(4) permits overtaking on the left only in three situations. First, the right-turner exception: the vehicle ahead has signaled right and moved toward the centre, and you intend to proceed straight or turn left. Second, the left-turn signal: you've signaled your intention to turn left. Third, the slow traffic exception: traffic is moving slowly in lanes, and the right lane moves slower than your lane.

The slow traffic exception is particularly relevant for M50 and Dublin motorway claims. In congested conditions, passing on the left while filtering is legal if the conditions are met. Outside these three exceptions, undertaking is prohibited and the undertaking driver bears primary fault.

The 2024-2025 Legislative Updates

The Road Traffic Regulations have been amended by S.I. No. 222 of 2024 [4] to include e-mopeds and electric scooters alongside cyclists for protection. Overtaking an e-scooter dangerously now carries the same statutory weight as overtaking a cyclist. The minimum passing distance of 1.5 metres (at speeds over 50km/h) or 1 metre (under 50km/h) applies to both. Breach of this distance grounds a claim even without contact if the rider falls due to wind turbulence or fright.

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Vehicle-Specific Overtaking Rules

Different vehicles create different risks and different claims. The standard rules apply, but additional factors affect liability.

Heavy Goods Vehicles (HGVs) and Lorries

HGVs have significant blind spots and longer stopping distances. If you were overtaking an HGV that changed lanes, the driver's limited visibility becomes relevant. However, professional drivers are held to a higher standard of care. Evidence from the HGV's tachograph (which records speed, braking, and rest periods) can prove or disprove claims about the driver's conduct. Request tachograph data through your solicitor early, as it's typically retained for only 28 days in the vehicle and one year by the operator.

If you were an HGV driver overtaken dangerously, your greater stopping distance may reduce contributory negligence findings. Courts recognise that a 40-tonne vehicle can't brake as quickly as a car.

Motorcycles

Motorcyclists face unique risks when overtaking or being overtaken. The key legal distinction is filtering versus overtaking. Filtering through slow-moving traffic is legal under Article 10(4) when your lane moves faster. Weaving through faster-moving traffic is undertaking and attracts full liability.

If you're a motorcyclist hit while being overtaken, your vulnerability as a road user strengthens your claim. Courts recognise that car drivers must take extra care around motorcycles. However, if you were filtering and a car door opened or a vehicle turned, you need evidence you were proceeding at a safe speed for the conditions.

Cyclists

The 1.5-metre (or 1-metre under 50km/h) minimum passing distance is now statutory. If a driver overtook you with less clearance and you fell, you have a claim even without direct contact. Wind turbulence from a close pass, or fright causing loss of control, is sufficient to ground a claim where the statutory minimum distance was breached.

Evidence challenges: without dashcam footage, proving inadequate clearance is difficult. Consider a rear-facing camera if you cycle regularly on roads where overtaking occurs.

Agricultural Vehicles and Tractors

Tractors and farm machinery must display amber warning beacons on public roads. James v Halliday [2024] IEHC 281 [5] established that missing beacons can shift 75% liability to the agricultural vehicle, even where the other driver was overtaking. If you collided with farm machinery lacking proper lighting, this significantly strengthens your claim.

Conversely, if you were driving an agricultural vehicle and were hit while turning, ensure your lighting and beacon compliance is documented. An insurance investigator will check this immediately.

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Responsibilities of Both Drivers

Courts assess overtaking accidents through a dual-lens analysis. Both drivers have duties, and both can breach them.

Duties in an Overtaking Scenario
Overtaking DriverOvertaken Driver
Ensure road ahead is free and long enoughMaintain steady speed and position
Don't overtake where prohibited by markingsDon't accelerate while being overtaken
Complete maneuver without causing danger or inconvenienceSignal clearly and in good time before turning
Leave adequate clearance when returning to laneCheck mirrors before changing position
Don't overtake near junctions, bends, or hills with poor visibilityAllow safe passage if overtake lawfully commenced

The Injuries Resolution Board (IRB), formerly the Personal Injuries Assessment Board (PIAB) until 2023, doesn't detail this dual-duty framework in its published guidance. Yet in Circuit Court practice, solicitors regularly argue both sides of the conduct analysis. A turning driver who didn't check mirrors faces contributory negligence findings of 20-30%, even where the overtaker crossed a continuous line.

What the timeline estimates don't account for: disputed liability overtaking cases often bypass IRB assessment and proceed directly to court because liability is contested. The official 9-month IRB timeline assumes accepted liability. Disputed cases typically take 18-24 months in Dublin Circuit Court.

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Contributory Negligence: How Liability Splits Work

You CAN claim compensation even if you were partly at fault. Under Section 34 of the Civil Liability Act 1961 [3], Irish courts apportion liability between parties and reduce damages accordingly. As the Act states, this is a proportional system, not all-or-nothing.

Typical liability splits in overtaking cases: where the overtaker crosses a continuous line and the overtaken driver did nothing wrong, 100% falls on the overtaker. Where the overtaker crosses a continuous line but the overtaken driver turned without signal, courts typically find 75/25 against the overtaker. Where a legal overtake meets a turner who didn't check mirrors, splits of 70/30 or 60/40 are common. Junction overtakes with both drivers proceeding normally often result in 80/20 against the overtaker because overtaking at junctions carries inherent risk.

James v Halliday [2024] IEHC 281 [5]

Facts: A tractor without an amber beacon was hit from behind while turning. Holding: 75/25 liability split. The tractor owner bore 75% for the lighting breach. The car driver bore 25% for travelling too fast for conditions. Why it matters: "I wasn't speeding" isn't a complete defence if you didn't drive appropriately for conditions. courts.ie

Practical implication: Don't assume you can't claim because you were overtaking. If the other driver contributed through their own negligence, your compensation reduces proportionally but doesn't disappear. A 25% reduction on a €30,000 award still leaves €22,500.

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Edge Cases That Other Guides Miss

Standard overtaking advice doesn't address these scenarios, but they arise regularly in Irish claims.

Motorcycle filtering vs overtaking: These aren't the same. Under Article 10(4), filtering through slow-moving traffic in a faster lane is legal. However, filtering through stationary traffic at junctions creates liability questions most guides ignore. If you're filtering legally and a car door opens or a vehicle turns without warning, you have a claim. If you're filtering through fast-moving traffic, that's undertaking, and you bear primary fault.
Electric vehicles and the "silent approach" problem: With EVs, the traditional defence "I didn't hear them coming" carries less weight. Courts increasingly expect drivers to check mirrors regardless of audible cues. However, the absence of engine noise may reduce contributory negligence findings against turning drivers who genuinely had no warning.
Overtaking in temporary roadworks zones: Temporary road markings supersede permanent ones. If temporary broken lines permit overtaking, you're legally allowed to pass even if permanent continuous lines are visible beneath. The issue is proving which markings were in place at the collision time. Roadworks CCTV and contractor records become critical evidence.
Night-time overtaking: The duty to ensure a clear road ahead becomes stricter after dark. Courts examine headlight range, reaction times, and whether the overtake should have been attempted given reduced visibility. If you collided with an unlit or poorly lit vehicle, contributory negligence may apply to the other party even if you were overtaking.
Agricultural vehicles without beacons: Tractors and farm machinery must display amber warning beacons when on public roads. If you collided with an agricultural vehicle that lacked proper lighting or beacons, they bear significant fault under S.I. 182/1997 even if you were overtaking. James v Halliday [2024] established that missing beacons can result in 75% liability on the agricultural vehicle.

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Evidence You Need for an Overtaking Accident Claim

Road marking photos, witness statements, dashcam footage, and the Garda report are critical. Overtaking claims require evidence that general car accident guides overlook.

Evidence Preservation Timeline

Evidence disappears faster than most claimants expect. Here's what to do and when:

Hour 1 Photograph road markings, vehicle damage, and debris from multiple angles. Capture sight lines from both drivers' perspectives. Hours 1-24 Obtain witness names, phone numbers, and vehicle registrations. Ask if anyone has dashcam footage. Days 1-2 Report to Gardaí. Obtain the PULSE reference number. This is essential for MIBI claims and insurer correspondence. Days 1-7 Submit CCTV/DSAR requests to ALL nearby premises. Petrol stations retain footage longest (28-30 days). Retail shops typically delete after 7-14 days. Local authority cameras vary (14-30 days). Week 1-2 Attend GP. Ensure injuries are documented with date of onset linked to the accident. Week 2-4 Consider instructing a forensic collision engineer before physical evidence disappears. Skid marks fade, debris is cleared, and vehicles are repaired or scrapped.

Forensic Collision Engineers

For disputed liability overtaking claims, a forensic collision engineer can reconstruct the sequence of events from physical evidence. Cost: typically €800-€2,500 depending on complexity. Turnaround: 6-10 weeks for a detailed report. If liability is heavily contested and the claim value justifies it, early instruction preserves options. Once the scene is cleared and vehicles repaired, reconstruction becomes significantly harder.

How Forensic Engineers Calculate Speed from Damage

Forensic collision engineers use established physics principles to estimate vehicle speeds at impact. The primary methods are crush depth analysis (measuring how far bodywork deformed and comparing to known crash test data), skid mark analysis (calculating speed from tyre mark length, road surface friction coefficient, and braking efficiency), and momentum conservation (using the vehicles' final positions and masses to work backwards to impact speeds).

For overtaking claims, the critical question is often "how fast was the overtaking vehicle travelling?" If crush damage suggests 80km/h impact on a 60km/h road, that's strong evidence of excessive speed even if the overtaker wasn't "speeding" per se. Modern vehicles may also have Event Data Recorders (EDRs) that capture speed, throttle position, and braking data in the seconds before impact. EDR data extraction costs €300-€600 and can provide definitive speed evidence.

McGowan v O'Neill [2022] IEHC 620 [6]

Facts: The plaintiff claimed injury from an overtaking collision. Holding: Claim failed because forensic collision analysis contradicted her account. The debris pattern and damage angles supported the defendant's version. Why it matters: Early evidence preservation, particularly engaging a forensic engineer before physical evidence disappears, makes the difference. courts.ie

CCTV retention by business type: Petrol stations: 28-30 days. Supermarkets: 14-30 days. Small retail: 7-14 days. Private residences: varies widely (often 7 days). Local authority cameras: 14-30 days. A GDPR subject access request [7] takes time to process. Act within days, not weeks. A mistake we often see: claimants wait until they've instructed a solicitor before requesting footage. By then, it's often gone.

The Garda Abstract: What It Contains and How to Get It

The Garda abstract (also called the collision report) is a critical document for your claim. It contains details recorded by the investigating Garda at the scene and afterwards, including: the date, time, and precise location of the collision; weather and road conditions; names and addresses of all parties; vehicle registration numbers and insurance details; witness names and statements; a sketch of the collision scene; the Garda's observations about damage, road markings, and sight lines; and any preliminary assessment of contributing factors.

How to request it: Write to the Superintendent at the Garda station that investigated the collision. Include your full name, the date and location of the accident, and your PULSE reference number. Fees vary by station (typically €40-€80), so confirm the current amount and payment method when requesting. Response time is typically 4-8 weeks, though it can take longer for complex collisions.

What "no prosecution" means for your civil claim: If the Gardaí decide not to prosecute the other driver, this doesn't affect your civil claim. The Gardaí apply a criminal standard (beyond reasonable doubt) which is much higher than the civil standard (balance of probabilities). Many successful civil claims proceed where no criminal prosecution was brought.

Timing matters: Request the Garda abstract early, even before instructing a solicitor. It takes weeks to arrive, and you'll need it for your IRB Form A. Don't wait until your solicitor asks for it—by then you've lost valuable time.

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Common Mistakes That Weaken Overtaking Claims

These errors can reduce your compensation or sink your claim entirely. Avoid them.

❌ Admitting fault at the scene. Saying "sorry, I didn't see you" or "my fault" can be used against you. You may be in shock and not have full information. Exchange details, but don't discuss fault.

❌ Delaying medical attention. If you don't see a doctor within 48-72 hours, insurers argue your injuries weren't caused by the accident. Even if you feel fine initially, get checked. Whiplash symptoms often emerge 24-48 hours later.

❌ Waiting too long to request CCTV. Most businesses delete footage within 7-14 days. By the time you've instructed a solicitor and they've written a letter, it's gone. Request it yourself immediately using a GDPR subject access request.

❌ Repairing your vehicle before inspection. The damage to your vehicle is evidence. If you repair it before an engineer inspects it, you've destroyed evidence of impact angles and forces. At minimum, take detailed photographs of all damage from multiple angles before any repairs.

❌ Posting about the accident on social media. Insurance investigators will find your posts. Photos of you at a party the week after your "debilitating" injury undermine your claim. Anything you post can and will be used against you.

❌ Accepting an early settlement offer. Insurers often make quick offers hoping you'll accept before you understand your claim's full value. These offers are almost always too low. Get legal advice before accepting anything.

❌ Missing the 2-year deadline. The Statute of Limitations is strict. Miss it by one day and your claim is gone. Don't assume you have plenty of time. Start the process early.

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Compensation for Overtaking Accident Injuries

Compensation follows the Personal Injuries Guidelines 2024 based on injury severity. Overtaking collisions often cause head-on or side-impact injuries that fall at the more serious end of the spectrum.

According to the Judicial Council Personal Injuries Guidelines [8], which replaced the Book of Quantum in 2021, general damages for whiplash injuries range from €500 to €83,400 depending on severity. Specifically: minor whiplash with full recovery under 6 months attracts €500-€3,000; moderate neck injury with symptoms for 1-2 years warrants €3,000-€15,700; and severe neck injury with permanent limitation commands €15,700-€83,400. These figures are indicative, not guaranteed. Every case differs.

Beyond general damages for pain and suffering, you can claim medical expenses (GP visits, physiotherapy, surgery, medication), lost earnings (past and future, including overtime and bonuses), care and assistance (help from family members during recovery), travel costs (hospital visits, specialist appointments), and vehicle damage (repair or write-off value, hire car costs).

Worked Example: Moderate Whiplash Claim

Scenario: Sarah was hit when another driver overtook on a continuous white line and clipped her car as they pulled back in. She suffered moderate whiplash with symptoms lasting 14 months.

General damages (pain and suffering): €9,500 (mid-range for moderate neck injury per Guidelines)

Special damages:

GP visits (6 × €60): €360
Physiotherapy (12 sessions × €70): €840
Lost earnings (3 weeks off work × €650/week): €1,950
Travel to appointments (estimated): €180
Vehicle repair excess: €500

Total special damages: €3,830

Total claim value: €13,330

After 25% contributory negligence (Sarah was slow to brake): €9,998

This example is illustrative. Your claim will depend on your specific circumstances, injuries, and evidence.

📊 Practical settlement insight: While the Guidelines show €3,000-€15,700 for moderate whiplash, the practical settlement range in Circuit Court for moderate soft tissue injuries is typically €8,000-€12,000 where liability is accepted. Disputed liability cases that proceed to hearing tend toward the middle of the range, as judges apply the Guidelines conservatively.

Overtaking accidents involving head-on collisions or high-speed impacts tend toward the upper brackets. The force involved in a collision where one vehicle was accelerating to overtake typically produces more severe injuries than a low-speed rear-end collision.

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The Claims Process: IRB and Court

Most claims start at the Injuries Resolution Board (IRB). The IRB, formerly the Personal Injuries Assessment Board (PIAB) until 2023, assesses compensation for personal injury claims. You must apply to the IRB before issuing court proceedings, unless liability is denied outright.

Five Steps to Claim

Claims Process Overview
StepActionTimeline
1. ReportReport to Gardaí, ideally within 24 hours. Obtain PULSE number.Immediately
2. EvidencePhotographs, witness details, dashcam, medical records.First 7 days
3. MedicalAttend GP and referred specialists. Obtain reports.Ongoing
4. IRB Form ASubmit via injuries.ie [2] with all medical reports.When treatment stabilises
5. Assessment/CourtIRB assessment if liability accepted; court if disputed or rejected.9 months (IRB) / 18-24 months (court)

If liability is accepted: The IRB issues an assessment. You have 28 days to accept or reject. If you accept, compensation is paid. If you reject, you may issue court proceedings.

If liability is disputed: Common in overtaking cases where both drivers blame each other. The IRB issues an authorisation to proceed to court. Dublin Circuit Court currently has an 18-24 month wait from defence to trial for personal injury cases.

When Criminal Charges Affect Your Civil Claim

Serious overtaking accidents may result in criminal charges against the other driver: careless driving (Section 52, Road Traffic Act 1961) or dangerous driving (Section 53). If the other driver is charged, your civil claim typically waits until the criminal case concludes. A criminal conviction for dangerous driving is strong evidence of negligence in your civil claim, though it's not conclusive. An acquittal doesn't prevent you claiming, as civil and criminal standards of proof differ (balance of probabilities vs beyond reasonable doubt).

If you caused the accident and face criminal charges, don't discuss the civil claim with the other party's insurer until the criminal matter is resolved. Anything you say could be used in criminal proceedings.

Time Limits

The Statute of Limitations [9] sets a 2-year limit from the date of accident. The clock may start later if the injury wasn't immediately discoverable (the "date of knowledge" rule under the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act 1991). However, don't assume you have extra time. Courts interpret this narrowly. Claim promptly.

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What Happens If Your Case Goes to Court

Most personal injury claims settle before trial, but disputed liability overtaking cases often proceed to hearing. Knowing what to expect reduces anxiety and helps you prepare.

Circuit Court Personal Injury Hearings

Overtaking claims up to €75,000 are heard in the Circuit Court. The hearing typically takes place in a courtroom with a judge (no jury for personal injury cases in Ireland). Present will be: the judge, your barrister and solicitor, the defendant's barrister and solicitor, witnesses (including you), and possibly medical experts for both sides.

The hearing usually lasts 1-2 days for a contested liability overtaking case. Your barrister will present your case first, calling you and your witnesses to give evidence. You'll be cross-examined by the defendant's barrister, who will challenge your account of the accident and the extent of your injuries. The defendant then presents their case, and you'll hear their version of events.

Giving Evidence: What You'll Be Asked

You will be asked about: exactly what happened in the seconds before, during, and after the collision; your injuries and how they've affected your life; your medical treatment and recovery; any previous injuries or accidents; and your employment and financial losses. The cross-examination will probe for inconsistencies between your testimony, your verifying affidavit, your medical records, and any other evidence.

Credibility is everything: Judges assess your credibility closely. Exaggerating injuries or being caught in inconsistencies can devastate your claim. Be honest, stick to what you remember, and say "I don't recall" if you genuinely don't remember something. Trying to fill gaps with assumptions invites problems.

Settlement at the Door of the Court

Many cases settle on the morning of the hearing, sometimes literally "at the door of the court." This happens because: the reality of cross-examination concentrates minds, late evidence or expert reports shift the balance, and both sides want to avoid the uncertainty of a judge's decision. If a settlement offer is made, your barrister will advise whether to accept. You have the final decision, but take their advice seriously—they've seen hundreds of these cases.

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What the Other Side Does: Insurance Investigation Tactics

Understanding how insurers investigate overtaking claims helps you prepare. They're not neutral arbiters. Their job is to minimise payouts.

Immediate scene investigation. For serious claims, insurers send investigators within hours. They photograph the scene, measure skid marks, and interview witnesses before you've even contacted a solicitor. This is why preserving your own evidence immediately is critical.

Social media monitoring. Insurers check your public profiles. Photos of you at events, exercising, or looking healthy undermine claims of debilitating injury. Adjust your privacy settings and post nothing about the accident or your health.

Surveillance. For high-value claims, insurers may conduct surveillance. If you claim you can't work or do daily activities, and they film you carrying shopping or playing with your children, your credibility is destroyed. Don't exaggerate your injuries.

Verifying affidavits. Section 14 of the Civil Liability and Courts Act 2004 [12] requires claimants to swear an affidavit verifying the contents of their pleadings. Insurers scrutinise these carefully. Inconsistencies between your verifying affidavit and other evidence (medical records, social media) can sink your claim or reduce your award.

Common defences in overtaking claims. Insurers typically argue: you were partly at fault (contributory negligence), your injuries weren't caused by this accident (pre-existing condition), you've exaggerated your symptoms (surveillance evidence), or you failed to mitigate your loss (didn't follow medical advice). Knowing these defences helps you prepare evidence to counter them.

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Realistic Timelines: What the Official Guidance Doesn't Tell You

The IRB's official 9-month assessment timeline assumes accepted liability. For overtaking claims, that assumption often doesn't hold.

📊 Triangulated timeline: Combining the IRB's 9-month target with Dublin Circuit Court's 18-24 month wait, the realistic timeline for a disputed overtaking claim is 27-33 months from Form A submission to resolution. This doesn't include the time to gather medical evidence before submitting Form A (typically 3-6 months post-injury while treatment stabilises).

Why overtaking claims take longer: liability is disputed more often (both drivers blame each other), forensic evidence may be needed to establish the sequence of events, witness testimony becomes critical and witnesses need to be located and statements taken, and medical prognosis must stabilise before the IRB can assess, which is complicated by more severe injuries from high-speed impacts.

Regional variation matters. Dublin Circuit Court has the longest waits (18-24 months). Cork runs faster (14-18 months). Smaller circuits like Waterford or Galway may be quicker still, though quarterly sittings mean gaps between hearing dates. If your case could be heard outside Dublin, this affects the realistic timeline.

What If the Other Driver Was Uninsured or Fled?

You can still claim through the Motor Insurers' Bureau of Ireland (MIBI). Under the MIBI Agreement (2009) [10], the MIBI compensates victims where the at-fault driver was uninsured or can't be traced.

According to the MIBI Agreement, the key requirements are: Garda report within 2 days of the accident, or as soon as reasonably possible (Clause 3.13); formal notice to MIBI using their prescribed form (Clause 3.14); and for untraced vehicles, property damage is only covered if you had a 5+ day inpatient stay with a €500 excess (Clause 7.1).

For detailed guidance, see our claiming against an uninsured driver guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is at fault in an overtaking accident in Ireland?

Fault depends on road markings, visibility, and both drivers' conduct.

The overtaking driver bears primary duty to ensure the road is clear under Article 10 of S.I. 182/1997 [1]. The overtaken driver must signal and maintain position. Courts examine both parties' actions and often split liability (e.g., 75/25) where both contributed. Crossing a continuous white line creates strong evidence against the overtaker but doesn't automatically mean 100% liability.

Expert insight: In practice, the "already committed" timing principle often determines outcomes. If the overtaker was alongside when the other driver began turning, timing evidence becomes decisive.

Next step: Photograph the road markings immediately and note any witnesses.

Can I overtake on a continuous white line in Ireland?

No, except for property access or avoiding a stationary obstruction.

Article 10(3) prohibits overtaking where road markings indicate prohibition. A violation strengthens a claim against you but doesn't automatically mean 100% liability if the other driver also breached a duty. Exceptions are narrow: turning into a driveway, avoiding a stationary vehicle, or following Garda direction.

Expert insight: What the regulations don't cover is the "inconvenience" test. Even if you didn't cross a line, causing another driver to brake sharply establishes negligence.

Next step: Check whether the collision point had continuous or broken road markings.

What if I was hit while being overtaken?

You may claim if the overtaking driver acted negligently or illegally.

Even if you were turning or changing lanes, the overtaker had a duty to ensure the maneuver was safe. Courts will examine whether you signaled and checked mirrors. Liability often splits (e.g., 70/30) depending on the circumstances. The claim isn't barred because you were moving.

Expert insight: The mirror-check duty catches many turning drivers. Courts expect you to check immediately before commencing the turn, not just when you first signaled.

Next step: Obtain witness statements confirming whether you signaled before turning.

What evidence do I need for an overtaking accident claim?

Road marking photos, witness statements, dashcam footage, and the Garda report are critical.

Photograph the road markings and sight lines immediately. Obtain witness contact details. Request CCTV within 7 days (retention periods are short). Medical records must link your injuries to the collision. Early evidence gathering is essential because physical evidence (skid marks, debris) disappears quickly.

Expert insight: Forensic collision analysts use debris fields and skid marks to reconstruct the angle and sequence. Once the scene is cleared, this evidence is lost forever.

Next step: Submit GDPR subject access requests to nearby businesses for CCTV within 7 days.

How much compensation for an overtaking accident injury?

Compensation follows the Personal Injuries Guidelines 2024 based on severity.

Minor whiplash: €500-€3,000. Moderate neck injury: €3,000-€15,700. Severe injuries requiring surgery: €15,700+. These figures are for general damages only. Special damages (medical costs, lost earnings, vehicle damage) are additional. Every case differs; amounts vary.

Expert insight: Overtaking accidents often involve higher-speed impacts than rear-end collisions, pushing injuries toward the moderate and severe brackets.

Next step: Keep all medical receipts and document time off work for your special damages claim.

How long do I have to make an overtaking accident claim?

You have 2 years from the accident date.

The limitation period runs from the "date of knowledge" under the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act 1991 [9], which may extend if injuries weren't immediately apparent. However, courts interpret this narrowly. Don't delay. Claim as soon as injuries stabilise medically.

Expert insight: The "date of knowledge" extension is hard to rely on. Courts expect you to seek medical advice promptly. Most extensions apply to latent conditions, not visible injuries.

Next step: Consult a solicitor within 6 months of the accident to allow time for evidence gathering.

Is undertaking (passing on the left) illegal in Ireland?

Yes, with three exceptions.

Article 10(4) permits passing on the left only when: (1) the vehicle ahead signals right and you proceed straight or left, (2) you signal left to turn, or (3) traffic moves slowly and the right lane is slower than yours. The "slow traffic" exception applies on congested motorways. Outside these situations, undertaking is prohibited and the undertaker bears primary fault.

Expert insight: The M50 exception is frequently misunderstood. Filtering past stationary or slow-moving traffic is legal only if your lane genuinely moves faster, not just because you chose to use it.

Next step: If you were undertaking legally, gather evidence that one of the three exceptions applied.

Can I claim if I was partly at fault for the overtaking accident?

Yes. Contributory negligence reduces but doesn't eliminate your claim.

Section 34 of the Civil Liability Act 1961 [3] allows courts to apportion liability. If you were 25% at fault, your compensation reduces by 25%. A €30,000 award becomes €22,500. You aren't barred from claiming because you contributed to the accident.

Expert insight: Insurers sometimes offer low settlements hoping claimants believe they can't recover anything. Even at 40% contributory negligence, 60% of a significant award is worth pursuing.

Next step: Get independent legal advice before accepting any settlement offer.

Can I claim if the other driver wasn't prosecuted?

Yes. Criminal prosecution and civil claims are entirely separate.

The Gardaí apply a criminal standard of proof (beyond reasonable doubt), which is much higher than the civil standard (balance of probabilities). Many successful civil claims proceed where no prosecution was brought. A decision not to prosecute doesn't mean the other driver wasn't negligent—it means the evidence didn't meet the criminal threshold.

Expert insight: Conversely, a criminal conviction for dangerous driving is strong (though not conclusive) evidence for your civil claim. If the other driver pleads guilty, that admission can be referenced in civil proceedings.

Next step: Proceed with your civil claim regardless of the criminal outcome.

What if the overtaking driver fled the scene?

You can still claim through the Motor Insurers' Bureau of Ireland (MIBI).

If the driver can't be traced, the MIBI compensates victims from a fund contributed to by all Irish insurers. You must report to Gardaí within 2 days (or as soon as reasonably possible) and provide all information that could help identify the vehicle. Compensation for "untraced driver" claims has some limitations—property damage requires a 5+ day hospital stay to qualify.

Expert insight: Gather every possible detail: partial registration, vehicle colour/make/model, time/location, and witness contacts. Even fragments help. CCTV from nearby premises may capture the vehicle.

Next step: Report to Gardaí immediately and request CCTV from all nearby premises within 7 days.

Do I need a solicitor for an overtaking accident claim?

Technically no, but practically yes for disputed liability cases.

You can submit an IRB Form A yourself and accept the assessment without legal representation. However, overtaking claims often involve disputed liability, complex evidence, and insurer tactics designed to reduce payouts. A solicitor navigates these challenges, instructs experts, and typically achieves higher settlements than unrepresented claimants. The "no win no fee" model means you don't pay upfront.

Expert insight: For straightforward accepted-liability claims under €10,000, self-representation may be viable. For disputed liability or serious injuries, professional representation significantly improves outcomes.

Next step: Get a free initial consultation with a personal injury solicitor to assess your case.

Can I claim for anxiety or PTSD after an overtaking accident?

Yes. Psychological injuries are compensable alongside physical injuries.

The Personal Injuries Guidelines 2024 include brackets for psychological injuries. Minor psychological symptoms: €500-€3,000. Moderate anxiety/depression affecting daily life: €3,000-€15,700. PTSD or severe psychological injury: €15,700-€60,000+. You'll need a psychological or psychiatric report documenting the diagnosis, its connection to the accident, and the prognosis.

Expert insight: Don't dismiss psychological symptoms as "just stress." If you're experiencing flashbacks, nightmares, driving anxiety, or avoidance behaviours, document them with your GP and request a referral. These symptoms are real injuries deserving compensation.

Next step: Discuss psychological symptoms with your GP and request a referral for assessment.

What if my dashcam footage is poor quality?

Even imperfect footage can help establish key facts.

Dashcam footage doesn't need to be perfect to be useful. Low resolution may still show: timing and sequence of events, road markings, weather conditions, your speed (from GPS if equipped), and the other vehicle's position. A forensic video analyst can sometimes enhance footage or extract data not visible to the naked eye. Cost: €200-€500.

Expert insight: Even footage that doesn't capture the collision itself can prove your version of events. Pre-collision footage showing road conditions, your lane position, and signalling behaviour counters false narratives from the other side.

Next step: Preserve the original footage file (don't edit or compress it) and provide it to your solicitor.

How much do solicitors charge for personal injury claims in Ireland?

Most work on "no win no fee" taking 25% plus VAT of your damages if successful.

On a €20,000 settlement, expect legal fees of approximately €6,000-€6,500 (25% × 1.23 VAT). Some solicitors charge lower percentages for strong cases or higher for complex litigation. You should also budget for outlays (medical reports, engineer fees, court fees) which may or may not be recoverable depending on the outcome. The LSRA requires solicitors to provide clear fee information upfront.

Expert insight: Compare several solicitors before committing. Ask specifically: what's your percentage? Are outlays covered if I lose? What's your estimate of total costs? Get it in writing.

Next step: Request a written fee estimate from your solicitor before signing any retainer agreement.

What is the average payout for whiplash in Ireland in 2024/2025?

According to the Judicial Council Personal Injuries Guidelines, whiplash compensation ranges from €500 to €15,700 depending on severity and duration.

The Personal Injuries Guidelines 2024 [8] set specific brackets: minor whiplash with full recovery under 6 months attracts €500-€3,000. Moderate whiplash with symptoms lasting 1-2 years typically results in €3,000-€15,700. In practice, Circuit Court settlements for moderate soft tissue injuries cluster around €8,000-€12,000 where liability is accepted. Add special damages (medical expenses, lost earnings) on top. Overtaking accidents often cause more severe whiplash due to higher impact forces.

Expert insight: The "average" is misleading because outcomes vary significantly. A 14-month whiplash case might settle for €9,500-€11,000, while a 6-week case might get €1,500-€2,500. Duration of symptoms and medical evidence quality are decisive.

Next step: Get a medical report documenting your injury severity and prognosis before accepting any settlement.

What happens if I don't report the accident to Gardaí?

You can still claim, but it complicates evidence and may affect MIBI claims against uninsured drivers.

There's no legal requirement to report all accidents to Gardaí, but failing to do so creates practical problems. You won't have a PULSE reference number, which insurers expect. You won't have a Garda abstract with independent observations. For MIBI claims (uninsured/untraced drivers), reporting within 2 days is effectively mandatory under the MIBI Agreement [10]. Courts may also view failure to report as inconsistent with a serious injury claim.

Expert insight: Even if days have passed, report now. A late report is better than no report. Explain the delay honestly—shock, medical treatment, didn't realise the severity. The Gardaí can still create a record.

Next step: Report to the nearest Garda station as soon as possible, even if the accident happened days ago.

Is it worth making a personal injury claim for whiplash?

Yes, if the other driver was at fault and you have medical evidence of your injury.

Even "minor" whiplash can justify compensation of €1,500-€3,000 plus medical expenses. The process through the IRB is designed to be straightforward. The key factors are: was the other driver clearly at fault (stronger case), do you have medical evidence (GP records, physio notes), and are you prepared for the process to take 9-12 months minimum? For disputed liability overtaking claims, consider whether the potential award justifies the time and stress involved.

Expert insight: For minor injuries with clear liability, the IRB process is relatively efficient. For disputed liability or symptoms lasting under 6 weeks, weigh the emotional cost of a lengthy dispute against the likely award. There's no shame in deciding not to pursue a marginal claim.

Next step: Get a free initial consultation with a solicitor who can assess your claim's strength and likely value.

What To Do Next

If you were injured in an overtaking accident, take these steps: seek medical attention and keep records of all treatment, preserve evidence (photographs, dashcam footage, witness details), report to Gardaí if you haven't already, request CCTV from nearby premises within 7 days, and contact a solicitor to assess liability and guide your claim.

For accidents involving other collision types, see our guides on head-on collisions, lane change accidents, and motorway accidents.

References

All sources accessed February 2026 unless otherwise noted.

  1. Road Traffic (Traffic and Parking) Regulations 1997, Article 10, Irish Statute Book (Revised Acts). Governs overtaking duties and prohibitions.
  2. Injuries Resolution Board, Making a Claim (2025). Official IRB claims process guidance.
  3. Civil Liability Act 1961, Section 34, Irish Statute Book. Contributory negligence and apportionment of liability.
  4. S.I. No. 222 of 2024, Road Traffic (Traffic and Parking) (Amendment) Regulations 2024. Updates including e-scooter protections.
  5. James v Halliday [2024] IEHC 281, Courts Service Ireland. High Court judgment on agricultural vehicle liability and contributory negligence.
  6. McGowan v O'Neill [2022] IEHC 620, Courts Service Ireland. Demonstrates importance of forensic collision evidence in overtaking disputes.
  7. GDPR Subject Access Requests, Citizens Information (2025). How to request CCTV footage after an accident.
  8. Personal Injuries Guidelines (Second Edition, 2024), Judicial Council of Ireland. Compensation ranges for general damages.
  9. Statute of Limitations 1957, Irish Statute Book. Time limits for personal injury claims.
  10. MIBI Agreement (2009), Motor Insurers' Bureau of Ireland. Rules for claims against uninsured/untraced drivers.
  11. Road Traffic Collision Data, Road Safety Authority Ireland (2024). Multi-vehicle collision statistics and fatality data.
  12. Civil Liability and Courts Act 2004, Section 14, Irish Statute Book. Verifying affidavit requirements for personal injury claims.
  13. Legal Services Regulatory Authority (2026). Regulates solicitors' fees and requires transparent pricing information.

Gary Matthews Solicitors

Medical negligence solicitors, Dublin

We help people every day of the week (weekends and bank holidays included) that have either been injured or harmed as a result of an accident or have suffered from negligence or malpractice.

Contact us at our Dublin office to get started with your claim today

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