In East Point, bicycle crashes often happen in everyday, high-exposure situations—busy intersections, turning vehicles, lane changes, and roadway work that changes how drivers and cyclists navigate the same space.
After a crash, it’s common for insurance adjusters to argue:
- the driver “saw you in time” (even when visibility or timing is disputed)
- the cyclist was riding “unsafely” (often based on incomplete details)
- the injuries aren’t serious enough to match the crash
- treatment was delayed or unrelated
Your claim is more likely to move forward when your account is supported by documentation, and when the crash timeline is organized in a way that makes sense to insurers reviewing it from a desk.


