Seabrook is shaped by everyday commuting routes, growing commercial activity, and roadways where cyclists share space with vehicles traveling at varying speeds. In practice, that means bicycle crashes often turn into disputes over:
- Who had the right to proceed at intersections and turning lanes
- Whether a driver took reasonable care while changing lanes or merging
- How visibility and roadway design affected what each person could see
- Whether road conditions (construction, debris, uneven pavement) played a role
Insurance adjusters may assume a cyclist “should have avoided it.” In Texas, that’s not always the end of the story—comparative responsibility can reduce compensation, but it doesn’t automatically erase it. The difference is whether the evidence supports the driver’s negligence and the crash-related nature of your injuries.


