
You may still have a case even if your Uber or Lyft driver did nothing wrong. Rideshare crashes are often caused by another driver, a distracted motorist, a commercial vehicle, a delivery driver, or even a dangerous road condition. As a passenger, you usually are not responsible for sorting out who caused the crash. Your job is to get medical care, document what happened, and protect your claim.
The harder part is figuring out which insurance company should pay. There may be coverage through the at-fault driver, the rideshare driver, Uber or Lyft’s insurance, your own policy, or some combination of those. Insurance companies may point fingers at each other, delay the claim, or try to pay less than the injury is worth.

A lawyer can help identify every available source of coverage and keep the insurance companies from pushing the blame around while your medical bills, lost income, and pain continue to pile up.

After an Uber or Lyft crash, medical bills can become confusing fast. You may get bills from the ambulance, emergency room, hospital, imaging center, physical therapist, chiropractor, or specialist before anyone has accepted responsibility for the crash. That does not mean you should wait to get care.

Depending on the facts, payment may come from several possible sources. The at-fault driver’s insurance may apply. Uber or Lyft’s insurance may apply. Your own auto policy, health insurance, personal injury protection, or uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage may also be part of the picture. Which coverage applies often depends on who caused the crash, whether the rideshare driver had accepted a ride, and what insurance policies were active at the time.
This is one reason rideshare claims can be more complicated than a normal car accident. The insurance companies may not agree about who is responsible, and they may use that confusion to delay payment or pressure you into a low settlement.
An attorney can help track the coverage, organize the bills, and pursue compensation for medical care, lost wages, pain, and other losses.
After an Uber or Lyft accident, start by getting medical attention, even if you think your injuries are minor. Some injuries do not fully show up until hours or days later. A medical record also helps connect your injuries to the crash.
Next, save as much evidence as possible. Take screenshots of the ride details, driver name, route, receipt, app messages, and any report you submit to Uber or Lyft. If you can, take photos of the vehicles, license plates, damage, road conditions, traffic lights, visible injuries, and the crash scene. Get the names and contact information of witnesses. If police respond, ask how to get the report number.

Be careful about giving recorded statements or accepting an early settlement before you know the full extent of your injuries. Insurance companies may contact you quickly, but their goal is usually to limit what they pay.
A lawyer can help you understand what coverage applies, deal with the insurers, and make sure important evidence is preserved before it disappears. The sooner you get guidance, the easier it is to avoid mistakes that can hurt the claim later.
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