In Ontario, hit-and-run incidents commonly involve:
- Parking-lot impacts near retail areas and workplaces, where surveillance may be limited and footage retention is short.
- Pedestrian or bicycle collisions near higher foot-traffic zones, where victims may not immediately collect vehicle details.
- Roadway crashes during busy commute hours, when witnesses are mobile and evidence can be dispersed quickly.
- Construction-adjacent driving where lane shifts and changing traffic patterns make it harder to identify what happened without prompt documentation.
The practical takeaway: in Ontario, the difference between a claim that moves forward and one that stalls often comes down to how quickly key details are secured—before the “trail” of the incident is lost.


