If you slipped at a Michigan gas station—on spilled gasoline, black ice near the pumps, a leaking soda machine, uneven pavement, or slick bathroom tiles—you’re probably still replaying the moment in your mind. Falls like these happen in seconds, but the impact can last for months or years. The shock hits first. Then the pain. Then the embarrassment as people stare—or worse, as employees rush over only to shrug, blame you, or dismiss what happened.
It’s confusing. It’s humiliating. And it’s infuriating when you know deep down the fall wasn’t your fault.
A simple trip to the gas station shouldn’t end with medical bills, missed work, or daily pain that makes it hard to walk, lift, bend, or even sleep. But that’s exactly what happens to many Michigan customers who are injured because a convenience store failed to keep its property safe.
Here’s the truth: Gas stations have legal responsibilities. They are required to maintain safe walkways, clean up spills, monitor hazards, and protect customers from dangerous conditions. When they don’t, people get hurt. And those injuries are often the result of their negligence—not your clumsiness.
At Marko Law, we hear from injured Michigan customers all the time who were ignored, blamed, or brushed off after slipping at a gas station. We fight hard for them—and for you. Because no one should be left to deal with pain, financial stress, and uncertainty after a fall that never should have happened.
Michigan Law on Slip and Falls at Convenience Stores
Duty of Care
In Michigan, gas stations and convenience stores owe every customer a duty of care. That means they must:
- Keep their property reasonably safe
- Inspect the premises regularly
- Clean spills and hazards promptly
- Repair dangerous conditions
- Warn customers when a hazard can’t be fixed right away
If a store is too busy, understaffed, or simply careless, that doesn’t excuse unsafe conditions. They chose to run a business; with that comes responsibility.
What Counts as Negligence
A gas station may be negligent when it fails to take reasonable steps to keep people safe. Common examples include:
- Failing to clean up fuel, oil, or drink spills promptly
- Not salting or shoveling snow and ice, especially after Michigan storms
- Ignoring leaks from coolers, fountains, or soda machines
- Leaving tripping hazards like hoses, boxes, cords, or debris
- Not posting wet-floor or hazard signs
- Poor lighting that hides uneven pavement or slick surfaces
Negligence isn’t always dramatic—often, it’s the quiet, everyday failures that cause life-changing injuries.
Actual vs. Constructive Notice
To hold a store accountable, we must show they knew or should have known about the hazard.
- Actual notice: Employees knew about the spill, ice, leak, or broken pavement but didn’t fix it.
- Constructive notice: The hazard existed long enough that staff should have known—for example, ice forming over hours or repeated leaks from a cooler.
Most stores deny knowing about the hazard. That’s why proving constructive notice—through photos, witness testimony, weather reports, and store records—is critical. This is where an experienced attorney makes all the difference.
Michigan’s “Open and Obvious” Rule
For years, Michigan’s “open and obvious” doctrine allowed businesses to escape responsibility if the hazard was considered visible. Not anymore.
Recent court decisions have significantly shifted the law. Today:
- Dangerous conditions are not automatically excused just because they were visible
- Stores can still be held liable for unreasonably dangerous or unavoidable hazards
- Each case is highly fact-specific
In short: don’t assume you have no case just because the spill “could be seen.” The law is evolving—and increasingly protecting injured customers.
What to Do Immediately After a Fall at a Gas Station
Report the Incident
Tell a manager or employee right away.
- Ask them to file an incident report
- Make sure the details are accurate
- Do not let them blame you, minimize the fall, or refuse documentation
A written report begins a critical paper trail.
Take Photos and Videos
Document everything you can:
- The spill or hazard
- The pump area and surrounding pavement
- Weather conditions (snow, slush, ice)
- Your footwear
- Lighting, especially if poor visibility contributed to the fall
- Missing warning signs
Photos are powerful evidence—take more than you think you need.
Get Witness Information
If anyone saw the fall or the hazard:
- Get their names
- Get phone numbers
- Ask for a brief statement, even just a voice memo
Witnesses often make the difference between “your word against theirs” and a winning case.
Seek Medical Attention
Do not wait. Many injuries worsen over hours or days, including:
- Back injuries
- Concussions
- Fractures
- Ligament tears
- Soft-tissue injuries
Medical documentation is crucial for proving that the fall caused your injury.
Preserve Evidence
Keep everything:
- Your shoes and clothing (they may become evidence)
- Receipts showing you were on the premises
- Notes about what happened, what was said, and what you felt
Write down details while they’re still fresh. Even small memories can become key facts later.
Damages Michigan Victims May Be Entitled To
Medical Bills
A fall at a gas station can lead to serious, sometimes lifelong injuries. Compensation may include:
- Emergency room visits
- X-rays, CT scans, and MRIs
- Specialist appointments
- Surgery and hospitalization
- Prescription medications
- Physical therapy, chiropractic care, and rehabilitation
Lost Wages & Loss of Earning Capacity
Injuries often force victims to miss work or reduce their hours. Some can’t return to the same job at all.
You may be entitled to compensation for:
- Lost income during recovery
- Missed overtime or bonuses
- Future lost wages if your injuries limit your ability to work
- Permanent or partial disability impacting your earning potential
Pain and Suffering
Physical injuries come with emotional and psychological consequences. Gas station slip and fall victims often experience:
- Chronic pain
- Anxiety or depression
- Sleep disruption
- Loss of mobility
- Daily limitations that impact their independence
Loss of Enjoyment of Life
Maybe you can no longer play with your kids, exercise, travel, or do the things that made your life full before the fall. These losses matter. Michigan law allows compensation for:
- Lost hobbies
- Reduced mobility
- Inability to participate in meaningful activities
- Strain on family responsibilities
Out-of-Pocket Costs
A fall often creates a cascade of unexpected expenses, such as:
- Transportation to medical appointments
- Mobility aids like crutches or braces
- Home care or assistance
- Household modifications or accessibility tools
How Marko Law Builds Strong Gas Station Slip and Fall Cases
Investigating the Scene Quickly
Timing is everything. Hazards get cleaned up, witnesses disappear, and surveillance footage is often erased in days—sometimes hours.
Our team acts immediately to:
- Secure surveillance video before it’s “lost” or deleted
- Demand the incident report and internal documents the store doesn’t want you to see
- Interview witnesses while details are fresh
We gather the evidence that stores hope you’ll never find.
Uncovering Negligence
Corporate defendants love to claim “we didn’t know” or “we did everything right.” We dig deeper.
Our investigation may include:
- Reviewing cleaning logs to prove inspections weren’t done
- Analyzing staffing levels to show the store ignored safety
- Examining store policies to expose violations of their own rules
Negligence rarely hides well under scrutiny.
Working with Experts
To prove a hazard was dangerous—and preventable—we often collaborate with:
- Safety engineers who explain why the condition violated industry standards
- Medical experts who detail the full extent of your injuries
- Weather experts who establish how long snow or ice existed
These experts strengthen your case and counter the store’s excuses.
You Deserve Answers. You Deserve Support. You Deserve Justice.
A fall at a gas station can change your life in seconds. One moment you’re filling up your tank or grabbing a quick drink; the next, you’re in pain, embarrassed, and unsure if you can even stand. The aftermath can be overwhelming—doctor visits, missed work, medical bills, and daily pain that wasn’t part of your life before.
But here’s what you need to know: you shouldn’t suffer because a gas station failed to keep its property safe. These businesses have a legal duty to protect their customers. When they ignore spills, fail to shovel or salt, overlook leaks, or cut corners on safety, injuries happen—and that’s on them, not you.
The sooner you take action, the better. Evidence disappears. Surveillance video gets erased. Employees “forget.” Witnesses vanish. Memories fade. Waiting can make it harder to prove what really happened—and easier for the gas station to dodge responsibility.
At Marko Law, we act fast, we investigate aggressively, and we stand beside you every step of the way. You deserve answers. You deserve support. And above all, you deserve justice.
Contact Marko Law for a Free Case Evaluation
📞 Phone: +1-313-777-7777
📍 Main Office: 220 W. Congress, 4th Floor, Detroit, MI 48226
🌐 Website: https://www.markolaw.com/