A rideshare injury claim arises when a person is injured due to the negligence of an Uber or Lyft driver, or another driver who causes a collision involving a rideshare vehicle. What makes these cases fundamentally different from standard vehicle collision claims is the layered insurance structure that governs rideshare operations. Uber and Lyft both maintain commercial insurance policies, but the coverage that applies to your injury depends entirely on what the driver was doing at the precise moment the collision occurred. Whether the app was off, whether the driver was waiting for a ride request, whether they had accepted a fare, or whether a passenger was actively in the vehicle all determine which policy applies and in what amount.
Kentucky law classifies rideshare companies as Transportation Network Companies, and state regulations require specific minimum insurance coverage at each phase of a driver’s activity on the app. When the app is off, the driver’s personal insurance is the only applicable coverage. When the driver is available but has not yet accepted a ride, a lower-tier contingent liability policy applies. Once a ride is accepted and through the completion of the trip, Uber and Lyft’s full commercial policies provide up to one million dollars in liability coverage. Identifying which phase applied at the moment of your injury is one of the first and most consequential steps in a rideshare injury case, and it requires a lawyer who understands the specific regulatory framework governing these companies in Kentucky.
Louisville’s downtown corridor, airport route along I-264, entertainment districts around NuLu and the Highlands, and the dense rideshare activity surrounding major venues like KFC Yum Center and Churchill Downs generate a significant and growing volume of rideshare injury claims each year. Whether you were a passenger in an Uber or Lyft vehicle, a pedestrian struck by a rideshare driver, a cyclist hit while a driver was navigating to a pickup, or an occupant of another vehicle involved in a rideshare collision anywhere in Jefferson County or throughout Kentucky, Forman & Associates has the legal knowledge and trial experience to build a case that captures everything you are owed.
Most rideshare injury victims don’t realize that both Uber or Lyft’s corporate claims team and the driver’s personal insurer may be simultaneously evaluating their exposure from the moment a collision is reported. Rideshare companies have sophisticated claims management systems that track every incident in real time. Their adjusters are specifically trained to handle the layered coverage questions that arise in rideshare cases and to resolve claims as quickly and cheaply as possible before an injured victim has spoken with an experienced rideshare injury lawyer. By the time most injured people understand what happened, the corporate claims process has already been running for days.
The steps you take immediately after a rideshare injury directly affect the strength of your claim. Do not close the Uber or Lyft app on your phone before documenting the trip details, the driver’s name and rating, the vehicle information, and the route taken. Screenshot everything the app shows you about the ride before it disappears from your history. Seek medical attention immediately, even if your injuries seem minor, because serious conditions including traumatic brain injuries and spinal damage frequently do not produce their full symptom picture for days. Photograph the scene, all vehicles involved, road conditions, and any visible injuries. Do not provide a recorded statement to any insurance adjuster, whether representing the driver or the rideshare company, before speaking with a rideshare injury lawyer.
What you should not do is assume that reporting the incident through Uber or Lyft’s in-app system constitutes legal action or protects your rights in any way. It does not. The in-app reporting process is managed by the company’s claims team, which works in the company’s interest rather than yours. Forman & Associates issues immediate legal preservation demands to Uber or Lyft, their insurers, and all relevant parties from the moment we take your case, ensuring that trip data, driver records, app activity logs, and all available footage are secured before they can be overwritten or withheld.
The hours and days following a rideshare injury are simultaneously the most critical period for your physical recovery and your legal case. Rideshare collisions can produce serious injuries that are not immediately apparent, particularly when the collision occurred at low speed or when adrenaline is masking pain signals. Traumatic brain injuries, cervical spine injuries, soft tissue damage, and internal injuries all require prompt medical evaluation to establish both the diagnosis and the causal link to the collision. Every day that passes between your injury and your first medical visit is a day the insurance adjuster uses to argue that your injuries were not serious, were pre-existing, or were not caused by the rideshare incident.
Rideshare injury claims involve a level of insurance complexity that standard vehicle collision cases do not. Uber and Lyft’s claims teams are specifically trained to evaluate which coverage tier applies, whether the driver’s personal policy can be implicated, and how to position the claim in a way that minimizes corporate exposure. They pull app data, trip records, driver history, and vehicle information immediately. If a third-party driver was involved, that driver’s insurer is simultaneously conducting its own coverage evaluation. Multiple adjusters representing competing interests may contact you in the days following your injury, each attempting to gather information that serves their company’s position rather than yours.
At Forman & Associates, we take control of the claims process the moment we are retained. We identify every applicable insurance policy, determine the correct coverage tier based on the driver’s app status at the time of the collision, issue preservation demands for all trip data and driver records, and communicate directly with every insurer involved so you do not have to navigate the complexity alone. We never advise a client to accept any settlement offer from Uber, Lyft, or any other carrier until we have built the complete picture of what the case is actually worth and what every available policy is obligated to pay.
Passengers injured while riding in an Uber or Lyft vehicle are entitled to pursue compensation under the company's full commercial policy, which provides up to one million dollars in coverage when a ride is active. These cases are among the most straightforward in rideshare litigation from a coverage standpoint but require careful documentation of the trip and the driver's conduct.
A pedestrian struck by an Uber or Lyft driver while the app is active has a direct claim against the applicable rideshare insurance policy. The coverage tier depends on whether the driver had accepted a fare at the time of the collision, making immediate trip data preservation essential.
Rideshare drivers navigating unfamiliar routes, checking app instructions, or executing sudden stops and turns in urban areas create significant hazards for cyclists. These collisions frequently involve driver distraction as a contributing factor and require prompt evidence preservation.
When a rideshare driver's negligence causes a collision with another vehicle, the occupants of that vehicle have claims against both the driver and the applicable rideshare insurance policy. Identifying the correct coverage tier based on app status is critical to maximizing the available recovery.
When another driver's negligence causes a collision that injures a rideshare passenger or driver, multiple insurance policies may apply, including the at-fault driver's personal policy and Uber or Lyft's underinsured motorist coverage. Full coverage analysis is essential in these cases.
Rideshare drivers frequently work long hours across multiple platforms and engage with navigation and app interfaces while operating their vehicles. Driver fatigue and distraction are contributing factors in a significant proportion of rideshare collisions and are established through app activity logs and driving pattern evidence.
Rideshare injury victims are entitled to pursue full compensation for every economic and non-economic consequence of their injury under Kentucky law. The availability of Uber and Lyft’s commercial policies, which provide significantly higher coverage limits than standard personal auto policies, means that the potential recovery in a rideshare injury case is often substantially greater than in a typical vehicle collision claim. What determines whether that potential is realized is the quality of the legal team building the case.
In a Kentucky rideshare injury lawsuit, recoverable damages typically include:
Larry Forman has actually stood before juries and won. That track record is known in Kentucky legal circles — and it changes how the other side negotiates.
Trip data, app activity logs, driver history, GPS records, and available surveillance footage are all time-sensitive in rideshare injury cases. We issue preservation demands from the moment we take your case, before Uber, Lyft, or any other party has the opportunity to overwrite or withhold what matters most.
The coverage tiers that govern Uber and Lyft operations in Kentucky, the regulatory framework for Transportation Network Companies, and the strategies these companies use to minimize payouts are not abstract concepts to our team. They are the legal landscape we navigate on behalf of rideshare injury clients every day.
We identify every applicable insurance policy, every liable party, and every category of recoverable damages, building a case that pursues maximum recovery from every available source rather than the path of least resistance to a quick settlement.
You pay nothing out of pocket. Our firm advances all costs, and we only collect if we secure a recovery on your behalf. Zero financial risk to you.
Larry Forman is one of the most-watched legal voices online. He knows how to tell your story — in front of a jury, a judge, or a national audience.
Over $5,000,000 recovered for injured people all over the United States.
Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case is unique.
Kentucky's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is one year from the date of the injury. However, motor vehicle collisions provide a two-year statute of limitations from the date of the injury or the date of the last PIP (Personal Injury Protection) payment. This deadline is strict and missing it almost certainly eliminates your right to any recovery. Beyond the lawsuit deadline, evidence preservation is far more time-sensitive. Trip data, app logs, and driver records may be subject to routine deletion without a legal preservation demand. Do not wait to contact a rideshare injury lawyer. The sooner we can act, the stronger your case will be.