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The Shoulder
38
clear-heron-419

Rideshare driver here — got a massive liability demand after a fender bender. Is this normal??

I'm honestly losing sleep over this and need to talk to people who get it.

Background: I was driving for a rideshare app a few months ago, actively en route to pick up a rider, when I clipped another car in a tight parking situation. Minor contact, the other car had two people in it. Nobody went to the hospital by ambulance or anything — they actually drove themselves away afterward.

Here's where it gets complicated. The other driver was acting really erratic at the scene. Slurred speech, couldn't stand straight, kept trying to walk away before the police finished up. The officer took note of it and told me it would be in the report. I honestly thought that would matter later.

Fast forward: my personal auto insurance settled with one of the occupants for a modest amount — I assume because I was considered at least partly at fault for the initial contact. Fine, I get that. But now the other person's attorney is going after the rideshare company's commercial policy for a number that makes my stomach drop. The documented medical stuff I've seen is pretty minor — no surgeries, no hospitalizations, mostly soft tissue stuff.

I didn't even know how rideshare liability stacking worked before this happened. My personal policy, the app's commercial policy, the other driver's apparent fault — how does any of this shake out?

I have so many questions:

  • Does the other driver's intoxication actually reduce what the injured passenger can claim?
  • Can I be personally on the hook for anything beyond my policy limits?
  • Should I get my own attorney separate from whoever the rideshare company assigns?

Anyone been through something like this? I feel totally alone in it.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 3
    humble-finch-510

    I drove for one of those apps for two years and honestly never fully understood the insurance layers until I had a minor incident myself. The gap between your personal policy and the commercial one is real and it catches a lot of drivers off guard. You're not alone in feeling blindsided — this stuff is almost deliberately confusing.

    • 10
      wise-beaver-976

      Not legal advice, but your question about getting your own attorney separate from the rideshare's assigned counsel is a smart one to ask. The company's insurer is defending the company's interests, which may or may not perfectly align with yours. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney who works the defense side to understand where you stand personally. The other driver's conduct may be relevant to comparative fault depending on your state's rules — but that's a conversation for someone who can review the actual police report.

  • 7
    swift-bison-398

    The moment a big commercial policy is in play, the injured party's attorney is going to push hard for the full limit regardless of what the medical bills actually say. That's just how it works. The gap between 'documented injuries' and 'demand amount' can be enormous. Don't assume the size of the demand reflects the size of the actual harm.

  • 12
    mellow-marten-070

    I used to work claims for a large carrier and can tell you that soft tissue cases with no imaging findings or surgical intervention usually settle well below policy limits — but attorneys know that commercial rideshare policies are deep pockets and they'll anchor high. What matters is whether the company's insurer actually litigates or just wants to close the file fast. A lot of times they settle to avoid the cost of defense even when the claim is inflated. That's frustrating but it's the reality.

  • 12
    candid-wolf-398

    On your question about the other driver's intoxication affecting the passenger's claim — in most states the passenger can actually pursue both drivers independently because they're generally considered an innocent party. The drunk driver's fault doesn't necessarily cancel out your portion of liability. However, it can absolutely affect how damages are apportioned between you and the other driver. The police report documenting the behavior is important — make sure you have a copy and that you've confirmed what's actually in it.

  • 9
    silent-grouse-345

    From a medical standpoint, soft tissue injuries are genuinely hard to disprove even when they look minor on paper. No fracture on X-ray doesn't mean someone isn't in real pain. That said, without documented follow-up care, specialist referrals, or functional limitations in the records, building a case for catastrophic damages is tough. If you can, try to get a sense of what the actual medical records show versus what's being claimed.

    • 12
      steady-tern-752

      Three things: get the police report yourself and read every word. Get a personal attorney consult before you assume the rideshare company's lawyers have your back. And stop losing sleep over a demand number — demands are not verdicts. That number is a starting point in a negotiation, not what someone is actually going to walk away with.

  • 15
    steady-newt-431

    This sounds incredibly stressful and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. Please don't try to navigate this alone — even just one conversation with an attorney who knows rideshare cases could take a huge weight off. Most of them do free consultations.

  • 16
    candid-finch-911

    A few things I'd want to know more about: What does your rideshare contract actually say about indemnification? Some of those agreements have clauses that could affect your personal exposure. Also — did your personal insurer settle without consulting you, or did you sign off on it? Because if they paid out on your behalf without your input that's worth understanding fully before this goes any further.