Rideshare rides in Detroit aren’t just downtown. They cross through areas with heavy commuter traffic, high foot-traffic blocks, and frequent construction/roadwork.
After an Uber/Lyft crash, the evidence and fault questions often look different depending on where it happened, such as:
- Major corridor traffic: collisions on roads that carry commuters between neighborhoods and suburbs.
- Right-turn and merge disputes: common where lanes narrow or drivers misjudge gaps.
- Nightlife and event areas: higher risk of distraction, abrupt braking, or pedestrians crossing near drop-off points.
- Pickup/drop-off moments: disagreements about whether the vehicle was actively on a trip, slowing appropriately, or positioned unsafely.
- Construction zones: Michigan roadwork can create sudden lane changes—those details matter.
Because these scenarios generate different evidence, your next steps should be tailored to your location and timing.


