Many Central Point residents use rideshare for work commutes, errands, appointments, and nights out. When a crash happens, the “who pays?” question may involve multiple insurance layers—especially if the driver was logged into the app, waiting for a pickup, or driving someone to a destination.
Local context matters. In busy commuting stretches and higher-traffic intersections, crashes can involve lane changes, merging traffic, sudden braking, and pedestrian or bicycle near-misses. Even when the rideshare driver wasn’t the one who caused the collision, insurers may still dispute:
- whether your injuries were caused by the crash versus something else
- whether the driver had the right coverage status at the time
- what your documented symptoms show about severity
That’s why you need a legal team that can organize the facts quickly and push back when coverage or causation is challenged.


