Mount Washington is a practical place to live and work, which means a lot of trips happen around familiar corridors—commuter traffic, school runs, and evening outings. In those moments, rideshare pickups and drop-offs often happen near intersections, curbs, and crosswalks where timing and visibility matter.
Common local scenarios we see after Uber/Lyft collisions include:
- T-bone or intersection crashes during app-driven navigation and lane changes
- Rear-end collisions when traffic slows suddenly on commute routes
- Pedestrian or cyclist impacts near curbside stops while someone is entering/exiting a vehicle
- Doorway/curb disputes when someone steps into traffic after a drop-off
Because more than one party may be involved (rider, driver, other motorists, and insurance carriers), the early story matters. What you say—or what you don’t say—can influence how insurers argue about fault.


