In and around Fairborn, bike riders commonly share the road with drivers who are focused on commuting, school drop-offs, or getting to work—especially during high-traffic times. When a crash happens, the dispute usually isn’t about whether you feel hurt. It’s about what can be proven:
- Who had the right-of-way at the moment of impact
- Whether the driver gave enough warning while turning, merging, or changing lanes
- What the road looked like (markings, signals, debris, lighting)
- How quickly events unfolded—and whether statements match the physical facts
That’s why the first goal after a bicycle crash is not “winning an argument.” It’s building a record that holds up when an adjuster tries to reduce fault or question causation.


