Rideshare accidents typically involve cars arranged through apps like Uber or Lyft, but the legal problem is not “app versus passenger.” The legal problem is who caused the crash, who legally bears responsibility for the resulting injuries, and how insurance coverage applies to the specific moment of the collision. In South Carolina, that means your claim may involve the rideshare driver, the driver’s personal coverage, the platform’s coverage, and possibly another at-fault driver if the crash occurred due to someone else’s negligence.
South Carolina residents often encounter additional complexity because crash scenes can vary widely across the state, from dense traffic corridors to rural highways where visibility and road conditions can be unpredictable. Even when the crash seems straightforward, liability can become disputed if the other side suggests your injury was pre-existing, caused by something other than the crash, or not severe enough to warrant the medical care you received.
A “fast settlement guidance” approach is understandable, but you should be cautious about anything that pushes you to accept a quick offer before your medical picture is clear. Many rideshare injury claims involve symptoms that change over time, including neck and back pain, headaches, soft tissue injuries, and flare-ups of underlying conditions. Your legal strategy needs to be built around the full story of what happened and what the injury has done to your life.


