Spanish Fort sits at the point where everything entering Baldwin County from Mobile has to pass through. The I-10 interchange at Spanish Fort is one of the highest-traffic chokepoints in the region — commuters, commercial trucks, and travelers from the Bayway all converge on the same interchange before dispersing into the rest of the county. Add US-98, Spanish Fort Boulevard, County Road 64, and Battles Wharf Road, and you have a network of roads carrying more vehicles than they were built for, moving faster than local conditions always warrant.
Simmons Law represents car accident victims in Spanish Fort and throughout Baldwin County. Chris Simmons personally reviews every case. If you were hurt at the I-10 interchange, on US-98 coming off the Bayway, or anywhere on Spanish Fort's road network, call before you talk to an adjuster.
Spanish Fort's High-Risk Road Corridors
I-10 through Spanish Fort is the gateway to Baldwin County from Mobile. The interchange at Spanish Fort concentrates merging traffic, semi-trucks navigating the exit ramps, and commuters accelerating back to highway speed — a pattern that produces rear-end collisions and sideswipe accidents at a predictable rate. US-98 picks up overflow from I-10 and carries it north and south through the Eastern Shore corridor. Spanish Fort Boulevard and County Road 64 handle local residential and commercial traffic, where lower speed limits meet drivers who are still in highway mode. Battles Wharf Road edges along the bay with limited shoulder and no margin for error when a driver crosses the center line.
Spanish Fort's growth has been rapid. The Eastern Shore has attracted residents who work in Mobile and commute daily across the Bayway, creating morning and evening rush patterns that stress the I-10 corridor consistently. ALDOT's 2024 data showing 6,154 crashes and 26 fatalities county-wide reflects what that daily pressure produces.
Contributory Negligence at the Baldwin County Line
Drivers entering Baldwin County from Mobile cross from one Alabama county to another, but many of them have spent their lives in states that use comparative fault — where being partially at fault reduces but doesn't eliminate your recovery. Alabama is different. Alabama follows pure contributory negligence. The moment you cross that county line onto I-10, the same rule applies that applies everywhere else in Alabama: if you are found even 1% at fault for an accident, you recover nothing.
The insurance company for the driver who hit you knows this. Their adjuster is asking questions before you have a lawyer present specifically to build a record that establishes your partial fault. At Simmons Law, Chris Simmons gets ahead of that process — documenting the evidence that protects your claim and challenges any attempt to shift blame.
Court and Medical Facilities
Car accident lawsuits from Spanish Fort are filed at Baldwin County Circuit Court, 312 Courthouse Square, Bay Minette, Alabama 36507. Chris Simmons has handled cases in that courthouse and understands how Baldwin County litigation proceeds. For medical care, Thomas Hospital in Fairhope is the closest full-service hospital on the Eastern Shore. South Baldwin Regional Medical Center in Foley serves the southern portion of the county. Serious trauma cases may be transferred to Mobile.
Contact Simmons Law
If you were injured in a car accident in Spanish Fort or at the I-10 interchange entering Baldwin County, call Simmons Law at (251) 306-8333. Chris Simmons reviews every case personally. No fee unless we recover.

