Carrollton traffic patterns and roadway layouts often create predictable risk points for pedestrians, including:
- Commute corridors where drivers are moving quickly between home, schools, and retail areas
- Multi-lane roads where turning vehicles may be harder for pedestrians to see—and harder for drivers to spot
- Busy intersections around shopping and dining where pedestrian crossing happens frequently, even when visibility isn’t ideal
- Seasonal changes (rain, early darkness, glare) that affect stopping distance and line of sight
These factors matter because insurance adjusters may argue a crash was “unavoidable.” The strongest Carrollton cases focus on what a reasonable driver could have done—given lighting, timing, lane position, and whether the pedestrian had a lawful place to be.


