Fairmont traffic is busy at predictable times—commutes, late afternoons, and evenings when people are heading to work, appointments, or events. That means rideshare collisions often happen in fast-moving conditions where disputes begin quickly: who merged, who yielded, whether braking was sudden, and whether the driver was properly operating the vehicle at the time.
Even when you believe you’re clearly hurt and the other driver is at fault, insurers may try to:
- minimize the severity of symptoms,
- claim the injury is unrelated,
- or argue the claim should be handled under a different policy layer depending on the driver’s status.
Getting legal help soon helps ensure your story matches the medical record and the ride timeline—two things insurers scrutinize closely in West Virginia.


