Concord riders often share the road with drivers who are navigating daily patterns—commutes, school runs, deliveries, and traffic flow changes near commercial areas. Some collisions happen at intersections where timing and lane position matter, while others occur when drivers turn, merge, or fail to notice cyclists in adjacent lanes.
In North Carolina, fault disputes are common in bike crashes, especially when the story is incomplete or the parties disagree about right-of-way. That’s why Concord cases often hinge on:
- What the driver saw (or should have seen) in the moments before impact
- How signals, turns, and lane placement align with the crash timeline
- Whether the roadway had contributing hazards (markings, debris, construction activity)
- How your injuries were treated and documented soon after the crash


