Corinth traffic has its own patterns—commuter routes, school-zone congestion at peak times, and frequent vehicle-to-vehicle turning movements near commercial corridors. Add construction detours, limited sightlines, and changing traffic control, and it’s easy for what happened in the moment to become a disagreement later.
After a crash, insurers commonly argue:
- the cyclist “should have been able to avoid it,”
- the driver had the right to turn/merge,
- or your injuries were minor, unrelated, or worsened later.
If you don’t get ahead of those arguments early, you may end up accepting a low offer before your treatment plan is even clear.


