In Albany, many bike injuries happen in predictable settings: roadway merges, turning lanes, busy corridors during commuting hours, and areas where drivers may not expect cyclists in the flow of traffic. Even when a cyclist is clearly injured, insurers often try to reduce payout by arguing:
- the driver “couldn’t see” the cyclist,
- the cyclist was in the wrong part of the road,
- the crash was unavoidable,
- or the injuries are unrelated to the collision.
Georgia injury claims don’t succeed on opinions—they succeed on evidence. The sooner your case is organized around the crash facts and the medical record, the better your odds of countering those defenses.


