Many pedestrian injuries in South Florida happen in familiar, high-conflict situations:
- Crossings near retail and shopping areas, where traffic moves quickly and turning vehicles share the road with people crossing.
- Evenings and weekend traffic, when visibility changes and distracted driving is more common.
- Construction or lane changes along major routes, which can shift traffic flow and create unexpected sightline issues for drivers and pedestrians.
- Tourist and seasonal patterns, where visitors may be unfamiliar with local signal timing, signage, or pedestrian lanes.
Even when the driver “didn’t see you,” that doesn’t automatically end the case. In Florida, the focus is whether the driver acted reasonably under the circumstances—and whether that behavior contributed to the crash.


