North Tonawanda has a mix of commuting routes, neighborhood streets, and busier corridors where cyclists may share space with drivers who are focused on turning, merging, or pulling into traffic. Common patterns we see include:
- Right-of-way disputes at intersections where drivers misjudge a cyclist’s speed or lane position.
- Turning conflicts when a vehicle turns across a bike’s path.
- Door-zone and curbside hazards near parked cars and pickup spots.
- Construction and resurfacing issues that change lane widths, signage visibility, or road surface conditions.
- Event and weekend traffic that increases congestion and makes drivers less predictable.
When you’re injured, it’s easy to remember “what felt wrong,” but claims require what can be proven. A North Tonawanda case often turns on whether the crash story lines up with physical details and medical documentation.


