Charlottesville is a mix of busy streets, tourist traffic, campus activity, and construction zones. That combination can make bicycle crashes harder to prove—even when you know what happened.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Right-of-way disputes at multi-lane intersections where drivers are turning across bike lanes.
- Door-zone and curbside conflicts near busy corridors where parking turnover is high.
- Tourist-season confusion—people unfamiliar with traffic flow, signage, and lane markings.
- Construction and detour issues that change how road space is used (and how blame is later assigned).
When the other side tries to minimize the crash or suggest “it was just a cycling mistake,” the case usually turns on the same things: timing, location, visibility, and documentation.


