Las Vegas is built around movement—commuters, convention crowds, tourists, and locals all share the same streets. That creates case patterns that frequently show up in claims:
- Nighttime visibility and lighting gaps: Many crashes occur after dark, when glare from headlights, bright signage, and uneven lighting make it harder to spot pedestrians in time.
- Tourist-heavy intersections and large turning volumes: Hotels and entertainment venues increase left-turn and turning-lane traffic, which can complicate fault.
- Ride-share and curbside congestion: Stopping/starting vehicles, pedestrians moving around pickup areas, and drivers changing lanes in dense traffic can lead to disputes about “what you should have seen.”
- Construction and seasonal road work: Detours, lane shifts, and temporary signage can affect what both drivers and pedestrians could reasonably anticipate.
Because these factors are often contested, your early evidence matters more here than in a low-traffic scenario.


