Many Delaware bicycle crashes involve predictable risk points—places where drivers are often focused on multiple tasks at once: turning, merging, navigating heavier traffic flow during commute hours, or driving distracted near intersections.
In practice, liability disputes often come down to details like:
- Whether a driver gave proper yield before turning or changing lanes
- How traffic control devices were functioning and visible (signals, signs, lane markings)
- What the lighting conditions were (morning/evening glare during commutes)
- Whether roadway hazards (potholes, debris, construction edges) forced a sudden evasive move
If you were injured, it’s common for the other side to argue you “should have avoided” the collision. That’s why early documentation matters—Ohio cases often turn on the timeline, the physical scene, and how the crash mechanism connects to your medical diagnosis.


