Holly Springs has grown quickly, and with growth comes heavier traffic, more delivery routes, more construction activity, and more commercial vehicles mixing with everyday drivers. That combination creates patterns we see repeatedly:
- Stop-and-go congestion turning into rear-end impacts when a truck can’t slow down in time
- Lane-change and merge crashes when commercial drivers try to move through tight gaps
- Work-zone collisions tied to shifting lanes, uneven pavement, or unclear traffic flow
- Early-morning and evening commuter wrecks where fatigue and rushing play a role
Even when the crash seems straightforward, truck cases usually involve more than one layer of responsibility—driver conduct, company policies, maintenance practices, and insurance coverage that doesn’t operate like a standard car policy.


