Injured riders often assume the process will be simple: “Someone hit me, so I should be paid.” In reality, many disputes in Titusville turn on details—what the motorist saw (or didn’t see), what the roadway looked like at the time, and how quickly the injury was documented.
Common Titusville-area scenarios we see include:
- Turning conflicts at intersections where a motorist claims they never saw the cyclist.
- Lane positioning disputes in higher-traffic stretches where insurers question whether the rider was “where they should have been.”
- Construction and resurfacing areas that change lane markings, shift traffic patterns, or create unexpected debris.
- Low-light collisions during early morning or evening rides—when visibility, glare, and reflective equipment become central.
- Touring/visiting cyclists who may not be familiar with local routes and traffic flow, leading to misunderstandings about right-of-way.
These cases often hinge on evidence that disappears quickly—dash cam footage, traffic camera overwrites, witness availability, and even how the scene looks before it’s cleared.


