If you are injured in a crash in Conroe, Texas, focus first on safety and evidence: call 911, get medical care, and document the scene. Photograph the vehicles and roadway on I-45 North, SH-105, or near Lake Conroe, exchange insurance information, note witnesses, and request the crash report before speaking with any insurer. This is general information, not legal advice.
Crash-prone roads and highways in Conroe
Conroe is the fast-growing seat of Montgomery County, and its traffic blends daily Houston commuters with weekend lake visitors. Several corridors see a heavy share of collisions:
- Interstate 45 North — the main artery through Conroe toward Houston and The Woodlands, where growing commuter volume, construction, and sudden slowdowns near the SH-105 and League Line Road interchanges lead to frequent rear-end and multi-vehicle wrecks.
- State Highway 105 — the busy east-west route linking downtown Conroe to Lake Conroe, carrying heavy recreational and local traffic that spikes on weekends and holidays.
- Lake Conroe area roads — routes serving the lake draw seasonal visitors, boat trailers, and unfamiliar drivers, raising the risk of collisions during peak weekends.
- League Line Road and FM 3083 — busy connectors off I-45 lined with development and intersections, where turning and cross traffic produce many crashes.
The mix of steady I-45 commuter congestion and surging weekend lake traffic gives Conroe a distinctive collision pattern, with recreational routes busiest exactly when many drivers are least familiar with them.
What to do after a crash in Conroe
Put your health first. Call 911 so Montgomery County or Conroe responders can secure the scene and help anyone injured. Because injuries such as whiplash or concussion can appear hours later, a prompt medical evaluation is wise even after a minor-seeming crash. When you are able:
- Photograph the vehicles, damage, license plates, traffic signals, and road conditions.
- Exchange insurance and contact information with all drivers involved.
- Collect witness names and phone numbers before they leave — important near Lake Conroe, where visitors may be from out of town.
- Report the crash and note the Texas crash report (CR-3) number.
- Keep medical records, bills, repair estimates, and lost-wage documentation organized.
If your crash involved a boat trailer or a weekend visitor near the lake, noting where each vehicle came from and gathering contact details quickly is valuable, since out-of-area drivers can be hard to reach later.
How Texas fault and claims work
Texas is an at-fault (tort) state, so the driver responsible for a crash and that driver’s insurer are generally liable for the resulting harm. Under the modified comparative negligence rule in Chapter 33 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code — the 51% bar — you can recover only if you are 50% or less at fault, and your recovery is reduced by your share of fault. Texas also requires minimum liability insurance of 30/60/25: $30,000 per injured person, $60,000 per crash, and $25,000 for property damage. Serious injuries often exceed those minimums, so uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy can matter.
Why acting early matters
Texas generally allows two years from the date of the crash to bring a personal injury claim (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code 16.003). Acting early is especially useful in Conroe, where weekend lake visitors and other out-of-town witnesses scatter quickly, business surveillance footage along SH-105 is overwritten fast, and physical evidence disappears. Prompt, consistent medical care also documents the connection between the collision and your injuries. Getting organized early keeps your options open and your account credible.
Frequently asked questions
Are weekends more dangerous around Lake Conroe?
Weekends and holidays bring heavy recreational traffic to SH-105 and the roads around Lake Conroe, often including visitors unfamiliar with the area and vehicles towing boat trailers. That mix can raise crash risk, so extra caution and careful scene documentation are wise during peak periods. This is general information, not legal advice.
How long do I have to act after a Conroe car accident?
Generally two years from the date of the crash under Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code 16.003. Because out-of-town witnesses and footage can disappear quickly, preserving evidence and records early is a good idea.
What if the other driver had no insurance?
Texas requires 30/60/25 minimum liability coverage, but not everyone carries it. Uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage on your own policy may help cover your losses when the at-fault driver cannot.
Explore metro-wide risk zones on our Houston accident hotspots page, follow the what to do after a car accident steps, and see what losses may be recoverable on our types of damages you can recover guide. If your crash happened nearer a neighboring community, visit our The Woodlands or Spring resources.