The Shoulder
The Shoulder
50
Insurancespry-seal-794

Got hurt driving for a delivery app — does their insurance actually cover anything?

So this is kind of embarrassing to admit but I was doing a food delivery shift to make some extra cash when I got rear-ended at a red light. The other driver took off — full hit and run — so I'm dealing with this mostly through the delivery platform's coverage since my personal auto policy is basically bare bones.

I reported the accident to the platform right away and told them I got hurt. My neck and lower back are a mess and honestly my anxiety has been through the roof since it happened. I can't sleep, I keep replaying it, and I've had to cut way back on shifts because sitting in the car for long periods is just not happening right now.

Here's where I'm lost:

  • The platform says they have some kind of occupational accident coverage — but what does that actually cover? Medical bills only, or lost income too?
  • If there's a disability component, how do they even calculate what to pay you? I don't get a W-2, it's all gig earnings.
  • Is there a waiting period before any money starts coming in?
  • How long can those payments last?
  • What paperwork does my doctor need to fill out? My doctor is great but she has no idea how gig-platform insurance works.
  • Does the platform need to see my earnings history to figure out the income piece?
  • Once I send everything in, how long does it realistically take to hear back?

I'm not broke yet but I can feel the clock ticking. Any of you been through this with a gig platform claim? I feel like I'm just guessing at everything right now.

9replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

9 replies

  • 20
    curious-wolf-784

    I went through something almost identical last year — different platform but same basic situation. The occupational accident policy they carry is NOT the same as workers' comp, which tripped me up. It covers medical up to a cap and has a disability component, but the disability piece only kicks in after a waiting period (mine was like a week, I think). The income calculation was based on my average weekly earnings from the platform over the previous few months, so yes, they will want your earnings records. Start pulling those from your dashboard NOW so you have them ready.

    • 16
      daring-crow-330

      A couple of practical things: First, request a full copy of the occupational accident policy in writing — you have a right to see the actual document, not just a summary. The summary they send gig workers is often missing important details about exclusions and benefit limits. Second, keep a daily log of your symptoms and how they affect your ability to work and do normal activities. This sounds tedious but it becomes really valuable evidence if the claim gets complicated. And document every single communication with the claims team — date, time, who you spoke with, what was said.

    • 0
      restless-backseat546

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 13
    genuine-wren-758

    Just be really careful about how you describe your symptoms when you talk to their claims team. Anything you say can get used to minimize your payout later. I'd put everything in writing — email, not phone calls — so there's a paper trail. These occupational accident policies are designed to limit what the platform pays out, not to make you whole.

    • 12
      brave-marten-818

      Former claims person here. A few things from the inside:

      1) These gig platform policies typically have a pretty low weekly disability cap — often way less than what you were actually making. 2) The approval timeline varies wildly. If your documentation is clean and complete, maybe 2-3 weeks. If anything is missing or they want an independent medical exam, it drags out much longer. 3) Mental health stuff like anxiety is often treated separately and can be harder to get covered — make sure your doctor documents it explicitly and connects it to the accident. Don't assume they'll connect the dots themselves.

  • 22
    warm-otter-500

    Please don't downplay the anxiety and sleep issues when you talk to your doctor. Those are real injuries, not just 'stress.' Ask her to document the psychological symptoms with the same detail she'd use for your back and neck — onset, severity, how it affects your daily function and ability to work. Insurance companies will look for any excuse to say mental health impacts are unrelated, so the clinical notes need to be thorough from the start.

  • 9
    quiet-swift-369

    Not legal advice, but I'd encourage you to at least do a free consult with a personal injury attorney before you get too deep into the claims process. The hit-and-run piece is actually significant — depending on your state and your own policy, there may be uninsured motorist coverage available that you're not thinking about. And gig platform occupational accident policies can be genuinely complex to navigate. Most PI attorneys don't charge for an initial call and can tell you pretty quickly if there's more on the table than you realize.

    • 19
      brave-hare-205

      Ugh, I'm so sorry. You're dealing with physical pain, anxiety, lost income, AND trying to figure out insurance bureaucracy all at the same time. That's a lot. Is there anyone who can help you manage the paperwork side of this? Even just having someone sit with you while you sort through it can make it less overwhelming.

  • 9
    cool-elk-013

    Stop waiting for them to explain things to you. File everything in writing, get your doctor to submit documentation ASAP, and download every earnings statement you can from the platform's app right now. The longer you wait the harder it gets to reconstruct your income history. Also look up whether your state has any specific gig worker protections — it varies a lot and could actually matter here.