Rideshare Accidents (Uber & Lyft)

Accessing the $1 Million insurance policies that protect passengers.

Rideshare cases are more complex than regular car accidents because there are three different insurance "periods" that determine how much money is available for your injury.

Who Pays When Your Uber Crashes?

Rideshare cases are more complex than regular car accidents because there are three different insurance "periods" that determine how much money is available for your injury.

The Critical distinction: If the app was OFF, Uber pays nothing. If the app was ON and matched with a rider, the coverage jumps to $1,000,000.

Common Rideshare Injuries

We represent passengers, pedestrians, and other drivers hit by Uber/Lyft vehicles. Common scenarios include:

  • Distracted Driving: Drivers staring at the GPS app instead of the road.
  • Fatigue: Drivers working 12+ hour shifts to meet incentives.
  • Unsafe Drop-offs: Passengers let out in traffic or dangerous locations.

Why You Need a Lawyer

Uber and Lyft use powerful insurance teams to deny claims. They will argue the driver was an "independent contractor" to avoid liability. We know how to pierce this defense and trigger the million-dollar policy coverage for your medical bills.

Trial Strategy and Authority Links

Use these resources while we develop liability proof, preserve evidence, and map damages for full-value litigation.

Common Questions

Who do I sue: the driver or Uber/Lyft?

Both may be liable. Rideshare companies classify drivers as independent contractors to limit liability, but the company's insurance policy applies during active rides.

What if the Uber/Lyft driver denies having the app on?

We subpoena ride data from the rideshare company to prove when the app was active. This data is critical to accessing the $1 million policy.

Serious Case Criteria for Rideshare Accidents

We focus on high-impact claims where evidence, legal strategy, and trial preparation materially change outcomes.

This section is designed for families comparing firms based on litigation depth, not marketing volume. Use it to evaluate whether your claim has the severity, proof path, and timeline urgency required for a serious trial strategy.

Do You Meet Serious-Case Criteria?

We qualify cases by objective factors that drive recoverable value and courtroom credibility.

  • - Serious injuries with clear medical documentation and ongoing treatment.
  • - Liability facts that require deeper investigation than a routine adjuster review.
  • - Meaningful losses that justify trial-ready case development.

Evidence and Investigation Priorities

We map immediate records that can be lost through short retention windows or delayed disclosure.

  • - Photos, witness statements, and incident reports tied to a clear timeline.
  • - Medical records, specialist opinions, and future-care projections.
  • - Coverage analysis and defendant asset review.

Damages and Value Drivers

We value claims from records and long-term impact models, not quick-adjuster formulas.

  • - Current and future medical burden.
  • - Lost income and loss of earning capacity.
  • - Pain, impairment, and quality-of-life harm.

Defense Tactics and Rebuttal Focus

Anticipating defense themes early protects settlement leverage and trial positioning.

  • - Soft-tissue minimization and surveillance narratives aimed at reducing credibility.
  • - Liability splitting to suppress payout percentages below documented damages.
  • - Deadline pressure around quick releases before full diagnosis is complete.

Evidence Preservation Window and Timeline

High-value litigation depends on preserving digital, medical, and witness evidence early. We start with urgent preservation notices, then sequence liability and damages proof before defense narratives harden.

Delays can permanently reduce case value. A structured timeline allows us to prove what happened, who knew what, and when each party failed to act. That chronology becomes the foundation for both settlement pressure and trial testimony.

What Happens Next

  1. Confidential attorney review and case screening.
  2. Evidence and damages build-out with experts as needed.
  3. Negotiation followed by litigation if full value is denied.

Damages Documentation Checklist

Serious-value recovery depends on record quality. Keep a disciplined file of provider notes, specialist recommendations, work restrictions, wage-loss records, and day-to-day functional impacts. This record set is often decisive when insurers challenge severity or duration.

We align each damages category with admissible proof so valuation reflects true long-term consequences, not a short-term snapshot created before treatment stabilization.

Liability Framework and Proof

We align every allegation with objective records, timeline evidence, and expert testimony. The goal is not volume; it is trial-grade proof that survives aggressive defense motions.

Local Venue and Process Context

Oklahoma venue selection, filing sequence, and early motion practice can materially change leverage. We build each case for the forum that best supports full-value recovery.

Common Questions

These questions reflect the most common decision points in high-stakes injury and civil-rights case review.

What makes a rideshare accidents case high value?

Clear liability plus severe, well-documented damages and credible long-term loss evidence.

How soon should I contact counsel after the incident?

As soon as possible. Early strategy improves evidence quality and protects negotiation leverage.

Can you evaluate future losses before settlement?

Yes. We use records and expert input to model realistic long-term impacts before any release is signed.

Is there any upfront legal fee?

No. No fee unless we win.