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wise-wren-714

Gig driver T-boned me and now everyone's pointing fingers — am I just stuck?

This happened about six weeks ago. I was driving through a green light when a guy blew through the red and slammed into my driver's side door. The responding officers cited him and the crash report clearly lists him as at fault — no ambiguity there.

Here's where it gets messy. Turns out he was actively on a delivery run for one of those app-based food delivery platforms when it happened. His personal auto insurance acknowledged the report but basically told me his policy doesn't apply because he was doing commercial activity at the time of the crash. Then I tried going after the delivery platform and they came back with some line about how their drivers are independent contractors and their coverage only kicks in during very specific windows — apparently the way they're reading it, he doesn't qualify.

So now I've got:

  • A totaled car
  • An ER visit plus two follow-up appointments (and counting)
  • Missed work
  • Nobody willing to write a check

I'm not a litigious person at all — I really just want someone to be accountable and cover what this has already cost me. I don't even know where to start unraveling the coverage question. Is this a known problem with gig economy drivers? Has anyone dealt with something like this and actually gotten somewhere?

I feel like I did everything right and I'm still the one getting punished for it. Any experience or direction is appreciated.

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10 replies

  • 10
    keen-stoat-554

    This is so unfair and I'm sorry you're dealing with it on top of recovering. You literally did everything right — had the right of way, he ran the light, the police backed you up — and you're still the one scrambling. Please don't try to navigate this alone. Even just talking to an attorney for a free consult can help you understand where you actually stand.

  • 13
    quiet-newt-148

    Not legal advice, but gig driver coverage disputes are a real and growing area of personal injury law. The liability picture often involves layered policies — the driver's personal coverage, the platform's contingent policy, and sometimes even a third-party commercial insurer the platform uses. An attorney who handles these cases will know how to send preservation letters and compel documentation before evidence disappears. Most PI attorneys take these on contingency so you don't pay unless you recover. Worth at least a free consultation.

  • 7
    warm-raven-102

    The 'independent contractor' defense is one of the oldest tricks in the gig economy playbook. These platforms absolutely know their drivers get into accidents and they've engineered their coverage language specifically to create these gaps. Don't take their first answer as the final word — that denial letter is just round one.

    • 4
      curious-grouse-106

      I used to work claims and honestly the gig platform coverage question is genuinely complicated, but here's what I'd look at: most major delivery platforms are required in many states to carry liability coverage that's active from the moment a driver accepts an order to the moment the delivery is completed. If he had an active order on his app when he hit you, that window argument gets a lot stronger. Request documentation of his app status at the exact time of the crash — that's the key fact.

    • 7
      sharp-heron-011

      A few things worth doing right now if you haven't already: (1) Send a formal written request to both the driver's personal insurer and the platform asking for their coverage denial in writing with the specific policy language they're relying on. Verbal denials mean nothing. (2) Check whether your own auto policy has uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage — this situation might actually qualify depending on how your state defines it. (3) Keep every receipt, every medical record, every pay stub showing missed work. Paper trail matters a lot if this escalates.

  • 11
    spry-tern-241

    Ugh, I went through something almost identical last year — rideshare driver this time but same runaround. Personal insurance says 'commercial use,' the platform says 'contractor, not our problem.' What finally moved things for me was getting an attorney involved who specifically knew the gig coverage gap issue. The platforms actually DO carry contingent liability policies for active delivery periods, but they fight hard about whether that window was open. Don't let them just say no and walk away.

  • 14
    warm-beaver-773

    Two things: Talk to a PI lawyer this week, not next month. And file with your own insurance under your UM/UIM coverage in the meantime if you have it. Yeah it feels backward to use your own insurance when you did nothing wrong, but it can get you moving while the liability fight sorts itself out. Your rates shouldn't go up for a not-at-fault claim.

  • 13
    hearty-badger-577

    Quick question — do you actually have confirmation he had an active order on the app at the moment of impact, or is that just assumed? Because if he had already completed the delivery and was just driving home when he hit you, the platform's 'active window' argument might actually hold more water. I'm not saying you're out of options either way, just that this specific fact could really matter.

    • 3
      spry-vole-057

      The fact that the police report is clearly in your favor is genuinely a strong starting point — a lot of people don't even have that. It's not nothing. The coverage maze is real but it's navigable, especially with documentation this clean. Hang in there.

  • 3
    careful-swift-448

    Please make sure you're not letting the financial stress push you to skip follow-up care. I see this a lot — people stop going to appointments because they're worried about the bills piling up, but then the gaps in treatment get used against them later. Keep going to your doctors and document every symptom, even ones that seem minor right now. Side pain, sleep issues, headaches — write it all down with dates.