Every single day, Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (WMATA) MetroBuses travel more than 1 million miles through the streets of Washington, DC, Maryland, and Virginia. Nearly 400,000 MetroBus boardings take place on a typical weekday. That volume of service, combined with DC’s dense urban traffic, means collisions happen, and when they do, the results can be serious.
Federal data from the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration recorded 86 people injured in 114 bus crashes in Washington, DC in 2024 alone. Crashes involving WMATA buses, DC Circulator buses, and other government-operated transit vehicles regularly result in serious injuries to passengers, pedestrians, cyclists, and drivers of other vehicles.
Recent DC incidents: In February 2025, a MetroBus driver lost consciousness and veered off the road, crashing the bus into the front steps of a residential building in Northeast DC at the intersection of 10th Street and Bunker Hill Road NE. And in December 2025, WTOP reported that 29-year-old Jal Chuol Pinuieny was struck and killed by a WMATA MetroBus in the 4200 block of Minnesota Avenue NE. These incidents are not aberrations, they are part of a documented pattern.
If you or a family member has been struck by a WMATA bus, a DC Circulator bus, or any other government-operated vehicle in Washington, DC, you have legal rights. But pursuing those rights against WMATA is governed by a set of rules that are fundamentally different from a standard car accident claim, and missing a single deadline can end your case entirely before it begins. Monument Legal’s Washington, DC personal injury attorneys represent injured passengers and pedestrians throughout the District. Here is what you must know immediately.
WMATA, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, is an interstate compact entity created by agreement among the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia. It is not a private company. It is not a DC government agency. It exists in a legal category of its own, with its own immunity protections, its own claims process, and its own governing statutes that sit apart from both DC government claims and federal agency claims.
This matters enormously for injured claimants. WMATA’s unique legal status means:
Before you can file a lawsuit against WMATA, you must file a written Notice of Claim with WMATA within six months of the accident date. This deadline is strictly enforced. Missing it, even by one day, can permanently bar your entire claim against WMATA, regardless of how serious your injuries are, how clearly the driver was at fault, or how strong your evidence is. This six-month deadline is far shorter than DC’s standard three-year personal injury statute of limitations under DC Code § 12-301(8). Do not assume you have three years. You have six months to file the notice, then three years from the date of injury to file the lawsuit. Call Monument Legal immediately if you have been struck by a WMATA vehicle.
Your written Notice of Claim to WMATA must contain specific information. An incomplete notice may be rejected, leaving you without recourse. The notice must include:
The notice must be physically received by WMATA’s Third Party Liability office within six months. There is one important alternative: under DC law, a written Metropolitan Police Department report filed in the regular course of duty may satisfy the notice requirement if it contains all required information. However, police reports often omit key details, and you should never rely on a police report alone to satisfy this requirement without an attorney confirming it meets the standard.
WMATA MetroBus operates as a common carrier, a for-hire transportation provider that serves the general public. As a common carrier, WMATA is held to the highest degree of care and vigilance for passenger safety. This is a more demanding standard than ordinary negligence. It means WMATA bus drivers are held to a higher level of responsibility than a private driver, and evidence of any safety failure, speeding, failure to yield, distracted driving, ignoring traffic signals, carries particular weight in establishing the carrier’s liability.
The law treats passengers and outside parties slightly differently. If you were riding on the MetroBus when the crash occurred, WMATA owes you the heightened common carrier duty of care, and your negligence, if any, is evaluated under DC’s Vulnerable User Recovery Act framework if applicable. If you were a pedestrian, cyclist, or driver of another vehicle struck by a MetroBus, the same notice requirements apply, but the standard of care analysis is slightly different. In both situations, the procedural requirements, including the six-month notice, are identical and mandatory.
WMATA’s sovereign immunity protects it from liability for governmental or discretionary functions, decisions about routes, schedules, and service design, for example. But it does not protect WMATA from liability for the negligent day-to-day operation of its vehicles. A bus driver who runs a red light, fails to check for pedestrians before pulling away from a stop, or drives while fatigued is engaged in operational conduct for which WMATA can be held accountable. A consistent line of cases in the DC courts has confirmed that operational negligence, including failure to follow traffic laws, falls outside WMATA’s immunity protection.
A successful claim against WMATA can recover the full range of personal injury damages:
WMATA does not cap compensatory damages the way some federal agencies do, and there is no fixed schedule of payments. The value of your claim depends on the severity of your injuries, the strength of the evidence of WMATA’s negligence, and your attorney’s ability to present the full scope of your losses. WMATA handles a significant volume of claims internally and is experienced at minimizing payouts. Having an attorney who knows WMATA’s specific procedures and litigation record is essential.
WMATA is a sophisticated defendant with experienced internal claims staff and institutional knowledge of DC transit litigation. It will not be moved by a polite letter. It will be moved by an attorney who knows the notice requirements, understands the immunity doctrine’s limits, and is prepared to take the case to trial.
Yes. Whether you were a passenger on the bus or a pedestrian, cyclist, or driver outside the bus, the six-month notice requirement applies to any claim against WMATA. As a passenger, you are owed the common carrier’s highest degree of care, which strengthens your negligence case. The notice and lawsuit deadlines are identical.
You may have claims against both WMATA (subject to the six-month notice and compact procedures) and the private driver (subject to standard DC personal injury rules). These claims proceed in parallel. Your attorney will pursue both simultaneously to maximize your recovery from every available source.
Potentially yes. WMATA’s common carrier duty extends to the safe operation of the vehicle for passengers on board, including protection from foreseeable falls due to sudden or erratic driving. The same six-month notice requirement applies. Document your injuries and call an attorney immediately.
DC Circulator operations are contracted by the District of Columbia Department of Transportation (DDOT). Claims against DDOT or the District for injuries caused by DC Circulator buses are governed by DC Code § 12-309, which requires a written notice to the DC Office of Risk Management within six months of the incident. The notice and procedure differ from WMATA claims but the six-month urgency is identical.
WMATA: The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, an interstate compact agency created by agreement among DC, Maryland, and Virginia that operates MetroBus and MetroRail transit services in the region.
Common carrier: A person or company that transports passengers or goods for compensation and is held by law to the highest standard of care for passenger safety.
Sovereign immunity: A legal doctrine that protects government entities from being sued without their consent. WMATA’s immunity is partially waived for operational negligence by its employees.
Notice of Claim: A formal written notice that must be filed with a government entity before a lawsuit can be brought against it, notifying the entity of the claimant’s intent to seek compensation.
Interstate compact: A formal agreement between two or more states, authorized by Congress, establishing a joint agency or program. WMATA was created by an interstate compact among DC, Maryland, and Virginia.
Statute of limitations: The legally mandated deadline by which a lawsuit must be filed. In Washington DC, the standard personal injury statute of limitations is three years under DC Code § 12-301(8).
Contributory negligence: A legal doctrine used in Washington DC that bars a claimant from recovering any damages if they are found even 1% at fault for the accident.
Wrongful death: A legal claim brought by the surviving family members of a person who died as a result of another party’s negligence or wrongful conduct.
Self-insured: A risk management approach in which an entity sets aside its own funds to cover potential claims rather than purchasing commercial insurance. WMATA is self-insured for liability claims.