A study published in the Journal of Safety Research found that about one-third of rideshare drivers reported that they were involved in a crash while working. Uber and Lyft are the primary providers and account for the most rideshare accidents.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. has handled a variety of rideshare accidents and has the experience to fight for justice after a crash. If you were in an accident while being transported in a rideshare vehicle, you may be entitled to compensation. Call our Washington rideshare accident lawyers at (253) 383-4500 for a free consultation.
Money in a rideshare accident case usually comes from insurance payouts, so the first practical question becomes which insurance policy applies and how much coverage is available. Uber and Lyft tie coverage to the driver’s app status at the time of the crash, which means the app record can affect who pays for medical bills, car repairs, and lost income.
Multiple policies can come into play in a Rideshare accident case, and you can end up dealing with multiple adjusters who will likely try to push payment onto someone else. Freeman Law Firm, Inc. will take over those calls, request all rideshare records tied to the trip, and present the coverage facts in a way that forces a straight answer on who pays first.
A personal auto policy usually applies when the driver was off-duty and not using the rideshare app, so Uber or Lyft coverage usually does not apply because the driver was not working a pickup or ride at the time of the crash. Insurance companies sometimes raise “commercial use” or non-disclosure arguments when a driver also drives for Uber or Lyft, and those arguments can lead to coverage letters and requests for recorded statements. Our attorneys will acquire app history, phone timestamps, and trip logs to help confirm the driver stayed off the app when a platform record exists.
Uber and Lyft may provide coverage while a driver waited for a request, and limits can differ from trip-time limits. Disputes can start when a driver toggled the app, lost connection, or accepted a request close to the crash time.
Login records and request timestamps can clear up disputes about whether the driver was still waiting for a ride, accepted a trip, or had already started the pickup.
Uber and Lyft coverage usually increases after a driver accepted a ride and during passenger transport. Fault still controls payment, so another driver’s insurance company may still take primary responsibility when that driver caused the collision.
Payment disputes can happen when more than one policy could apply. One crash can pull in a personal auto policy, a rideshare policy, and the at-fault driver’s policy, which turns into delays while adjusters argue about priority and limits.
Delays can affect practical needs right away, like rental approval, vehicle repair payment, and medical bill decisions, so Freeman Law Firm, Inc. works to document app status and coverage terms from the beginning and push the carriers to commit to payment responsibility.
Uber and Lyft crashes can injure passengers, and the insurance issues can extend to people in other vehicles and people walking or riding nearby. Coverage questions still come into play whenever the rideshare driver had the app on, because app status can affect which policy applies and how much coverage exists.
Passenger conduct usually doesn’t determine fault, but policy limits and policy order can still slow down payments. You may also deal with multiple adjusters who each want a statement, and that can lead to inconsistent wording that later conflicts with the crash report or medical records.
A rideshare driver can cause a crash during curb pickup behavior, last-second route changes, or phone distraction tied to the app. A rideshare case can also include Uber or Lyft coverage when another driver caused the crash, because app status and policy order can still affect which carrier pays first.
Rideshare driving happens frequently near curb zones, parking lanes, and drop-off areas, which creates risk for people walking or riding near traffic.
A passenger can open a door into a cyclist traveling alongside traffic. A rideshare driver can also drift toward the curb while checking the phone, which can crowd a cyclist or clip a pedestrian.
Photos that show curb layout, bike lane markings, lighting, and vehicle position can help preserve the conditions that existed at the time of the crash.
Even when it seems like fault is clear disputes are frequent in rideshare accident cases. Uber and Lyft driving creates a few repeat situations that insurance companies lean on when they try to split blame or cut the payout. Good documentation can shut down those arguments.
In curbside collisions, insurance companies may argue that the stopped vehicle “had to stop,” the driver behind “followed too close,” or the lane blockage happened “without warning.”
Rideshare drivers rely on navigation, and a last-second route change can trigger a fast lane move or a hard brake. Intersections add another risk point when a driver turns across traffic to follow the route.
Rear-end crashes also happen when traffic slows and a driver reacts late after looking at the phone.
Uber and Lyft work pushes phone use into the middle of driving. A driver may check requests, follow the map, or contact a passenger, and attention drops at the worst time.
Our rideshare attorneys handle fault disputes in rideshare cases by gathering the evidence that supports your side of the story, challenging blame-shifting with specifics, and pushing back when an adjuster tries to reduce your payout.
Insurance payouts depend on numbers that can be supported with records. Medical charges usually form the base of the case, then wage loss and day-to-day limitations fill in the rest. Our team builds the case for damages around facts and documentation that show the full impact the accident has had on your life.
Treatment can start in the ER, urgent care, or a primary care office, then move into imaging, specialist visits, physical therapy, injections, or surgery when the injury demands it. Insurance companies review the timeline and the billing side by side, so records need to match the treatment plan and the symptoms noted in the chart.
Itemized billing helps because it lists each charge line by line. A summary balance does not show whether a provider billed twice, billed under the wrong code, or left off an adjustment that already applied.
Missed work can mean missed wages, but the impact on your job can also be through reduced hours or restricted duties that cut income over time. Medical restrictions are strong evidence of loss when they tie directly to what your job requires.
Wage proof usually needs employer records that show pay rate and time missed, along with medical records that explain why the time off happened and what limits applied.
Pain and injury limits can affect driving, sleep, household tasks, and caring for children or family. Notes help most when they stay factual, use dates, and line up with medical records, since insurance companies look for inconsistencies between what a person says and what the chart shows.
Being injured in a rideshare accident sets off a cascade of events that can feel overwhelming. Your safety and health come first, both at the scene and beyond. The list below covers key items to think about and practical steps to take.
Recorded statements can create problems when a detail later conflicts with the collision report or medical notes. Adjusters also ask questions that sound casual, then use the answer to argue that pain started later, the injury came from something else, or the crash did not cause the limits you reported.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. can take over those calls so you do not get pressured into statements that do not match the records.
Washington follows a comparative fault system, which means the percentage of blame assigned to you can reduce the amount of money you receive from an insurance payout. Insurance companies push shared-fault arguments to cut exposure, even when the crash report seems clear, so the details of lane position, following distance, speed, distraction, and intersection timing can become negotiation points.
A percentage reduction works like simple math. A carrier values the case, then applies a fault percentage to reduce the payment amount, so a 20% share of fault leads to a 20% reduction.
Shared fault arguments usually break down when the records tell one consistent story.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. gathers the right evidence, lines it up with the crash report and medical records, then challenges opposing parties with specifics that prevent insurance companies from trying to reduce your payout.
Adjusters will always look for reasons to pay less, and rideshare cases give them extra angles because coverage can change with app status and carriers can argue over policy order. Winning cases rely on a controlled record trail that controls the compensation discussion.
Adjusters may ask for a recorded statement within days of the crash. The questions they ask can sound routine, yet the answers can later get used to argue you accepted blame, you felt fine at first, or your description conflicts with the collision report.
Once you hire Freeman Law Firm, Inc., adjuster communication runs through us, which reduces the risk of inconsistent wording and keeps the discussion tied to what the records support.
Gaps in care give the carrier room to argue the injury came from something else or resolved quickly. A gap can also create timeline issues when the first visit does not mention a symptom that appears later in therapy notes or specialist visits.
Consistent medical documentation can close that gap when provider notes explain symptom development, referrals, and work restrictions, and when the records line up across visits.
Because multiple insurance policies can apply in a rideshare accident case, adjusters may argue about which policy pays first, which can cause delays in actions such as:
Our rideshare accident lawyers request trip records, app documentation, and policy information, then use the information to push carriers to take clear positions on payment order.
A spouse, parent, or adult child may need to handle calls and collect records after a serious crash. Insurance companies can refuse to speak with a family member without written authorization, which slows down updates and document exchanges.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. prepares the needed authorizations, takes over the communication, and keeps you updated without adding more calls to your day.
Washington’s statute of limitations for personal injury gives three years to start most injury and lawsuits after a rideshare crash, so the calendar date of the collision controls the deadline in most cases. If the crash was with a state or local government vehicle or related to roadway work, Washington also requires a separate government claim process and a 60-day waiting period that can affect timing, even though the three-year deadline still applies.
Freeman Law Firm, Inc. fights for justice when an adjuster tries to dodge responsibility, downplay your injuries, or cut your payout through coverage excuses or blame-shifting. Call (253) 383-4500 or send an email today for a free consultation, and let our team handle the insurance fight so you can focus on recovery and moving forward.
