In Cayce, many rideshare trips overlap with the same daily routes and risk points: stop-and-go traffic, turning movements at intersections, and busy loading/unloading areas where drivers and passengers aren’t always thinking about each other’s exact positioning.
Common situations we see include:
- Rear-end collisions on commute corridors when traffic slows and a driver reacts late.
- Left-turn / right-of-way disputes at intersections where multiple vehicles converge.
- Pedestrian or curbside injuries while someone is stepping into or out of the flow of traffic near a pickup or drop-off.
- Multi-car chain reactions where a rideshare vehicle is one link in a larger incident.
When you’re hurt in any of these scenarios, the details matter—because insurance companies will look for anything that suggests you were partly responsible or that your injuries “could have come from something else.”


