Daytona Beach traffic isn’t “average.” You’ll often see a mix of locals, commuters, visitors, and seasonal activity—plus pedestrian and bicycle activity near popular destinations. That combination can create unique problems in hit-and-run cases:
- Surveillance gaps: In tourist-heavy areas, cameras may exist, but footage can be overwritten or access can be delayed.
- Fast-moving witnesses: People may stop to help, then leave for work, travel, or the next event—so contact information can disappear.
- Higher likelihood of partial details: Impacts may happen at intersections, near parking areas, or along busier roadways where you only get a split-second view of the vehicle.
- Pedestrian/bike exposure: When someone is struck near crosswalks or high-foot-traffic areas, injuries can worsen without prompt documentation.
Those realities mean your case needs more than “general guidance.” It needs a plan tailored to how evidence is actually found (and lost) in a coastal, high-activity environment.


