In the first day or two, small choices can strongly affect your claim. If you were hurt in a rideshare collision near a busy intersection, on a commute route, or around a drop-off area, prioritize:
- Medical care first. Even if you feel “mostly okay,” get checked. Some injuries (like whiplash or soft-tissue injuries) can show up later.
- Document the scene while it’s still available. If there’s a safe opportunity, take photos of:
- where the vehicles ended up,
- traffic controls/signage,
- visible damage,
- road conditions (rain, glare, debris), and
- any hazards near where you were picked up/dropped off.
- Get the basic trip details. If you’re a passenger, save trip info from the app (time, location, driver name/vehicle details). If you weren’t inside the vehicle, note where you were standing and how the crash unfolded.
- Report to the right parties. You’ll likely need the police report number if one was filed, plus the insurance information for all vehicles involved.
- Write down your timeline privately. Do it before you talk to adjusters. Include what you remember about speed, signals, lane changes, and what you felt immediately after impact.
If you’re wondering whether an “AI Uber/Lyft accident lawyer” can help you do this quickly: tools can assist with organizing facts and prompting you to capture details. But your claim still needs a legal strategy that matches Illinois rules and the facts of your crash.


