While every case is different, many Beaufort crashes share a few practical themes:
- Left-turn and turning-yield failures near high-traffic intersections (drivers misjudge a cyclist’s speed or don’t complete a safe turn).
- Door-zone collisions when cyclists travel close to parked cars along busier residential streets and areas with higher turnover.
- Night and low-visibility crashes involving inadequate lighting, glare, or reflective signage—common during evening commutes and event traffic.
- Road work and lane changes tied to construction, detours, or temporary markings that make navigation harder for cyclists.
- Tourist-related congestion where unfamiliar drivers and unfamiliar routes increase the likelihood of sudden braking, lane uncertainty, or delayed reactions.
If any of this sounds like your situation, it matters that your claim is built around what the driver could see, what they should have done, and how the crash sequence unfolded.


