Fayetteville traffic isn’t just about speed—it’s about patterns. Many crashes happen in situations residents recognize:
- Commuter congestion and turning conflicts near busy corridors, where drivers may cut across lanes to reach exits or businesses.
- Campus-area road sharing where cyclists, pedestrians, and vehicles overlap on tight schedules and tight spacing.
- Construction zones and lane shifts that change how drivers expect traffic to move.
- Night riding and event crowds, when visibility drops and attention is split.
Because these conditions are common, insurers often focus on “what the cyclist could have done” rather than what the driver should have done. The difference in a Fayetteville case is usually how well your evidence matches the real roadway conditions at the time of impact.


