Metuchen is suburban, but it still has plenty of foot traffic—commuters walking to transit, students and families moving between activities, and residents crossing streets for errands. That matters because many pedestrian collisions here involve predictable, everyday movement patterns:
- Crossings near bus/transit access and commuter routes, where timing and driver attention become key
- Cars turning into or out of drive lanes and side streets, where pedestrians can be partially obscured
- Evening visibility issues during fall/winter—headlights, glare, and darker street conditions can shape what drivers “could” have seen
- Construction and changing traffic patterns, which can affect signage, lane placement, and sight lines
When these details are disputed, your case often turns on proof—photos, witness accounts, and records that show what happened in the moments just before impact.


