In the day or two after a rideshare accident, the choices you make can affect how insurers evaluate fault and the strength of your injury claim.
Focus on these priorities:
- Get medical care even if symptoms seem minor. In Rhode Island, delayed reporting can create unnecessary questions about causation.
- Document the scene while it’s still fresh. If it happened near a busy corridor, capture lane positions, traffic signals, skid marks, and vehicle locations.
- Write down your timeline. Include the approach to the intersection/turn, what you remember about signals or traffic flow, and how your body felt immediately after the crash.
- Save rideshare details. Keep screenshots or any trip info you can access (time, route, driver identity, and trip stage).
- Limit what you say to insurance adjusters. A quick statement can be repeated back in a way that supports the insurer’s version of events.
If you’re tempted to use an “AI lawyer” tool to speed things up, that may help you organize your facts—but it shouldn’t replace medical documentation, an evidence plan, or legal strategy.


