The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Ridesharemellow-wolf-637

Hit while driving for a rideshare app — now nobody wants to cover me?

Still kind of shaken up writing this out but here goes.

I was driving for one of the big rideshare platforms last week, had just accepted a ride request and was sitting at a red light waiting to head toward the pickup spot. Out of nowhere I get slammed from behind — hard enough that my head whipped back and my phone flew off the mount. The other driver pulled up next to me for like two seconds and then just... took off. I managed to get a photo of their plate before they disappeared around a corner, and I called the police immediately. Officer came out, took my statement, ran the plate, and said they'd follow up.

Physically I walked away but my neck has been stiff ever since and I've been getting these dull headaches that won't quit. Probably should've gone to the ER that night but I was so flustered I just went home.

Here's where it gets frustrating. I called my personal auto insurance and they basically said "you were working, talk to the rideshare company." So I contact the rideshare platform's support and they respond with this cold automated-feeling email saying I'm responsible for a deductible that's way more than I expected — like a significant chunk of money I don't just have sitting around.

I feel stuck in the middle. My own insurance is pointing one way, the platform is pointing another, and meanwhile I'm the one who did nothing wrong and got hit by someone who ran.

Has anyone dealt with this rideshare/personal insurance gap situation? Do I have any options here if the hit-and-run driver gets tracked down? Should I be talking to someone before I sign or agree to anything?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 19
    quiet-grouse-860

    Three things, in order: 1) Go to the doctor today, not later. 2) Do not pay or agree to anything until the at-fault driver situation is resolved — if they're found and insured, that changes everything. 3) Talk to a PI lawyer before you respond to the platform's email. Most of them are free to consult and this situation is exactly what they handle.

  • 17
    patient-fox-232

    Do NOT just pay that deductible and move on without at least talking to someone who knows this stuff. Insurance companies — both personal and the rideshare platform's insurer — are counting on you not knowing your rights. The fact that the other driver fled and there's a police report with a plate number could completely change what you're entitled to. Don't agree to anything in writing yet.

  • 17
    clear-fox-367

    Not legal advice, but a couple of things stand out here. If the hit-and-run driver is identified — and police have the plate, so there's a real chance — you'd likely have a direct claim against their liability insurance for your damages and injuries. That's separate from whatever the rideshare platform is asking you to pay. The two processes can run in parallel. Most PI attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency, so there's no cost to at least understanding your options before you start writing checks. Don't sign any releases.

  • 16
    brave-seal-129

    Please go get checked out. Headaches and neck stiffness after a rear-end collision can be whiplash, and whiplash that isn't treated early can turn into a longer-term problem. Even if you feel 'mostly okay,' soft tissue injuries don't always show up fully until 24–72 hours after. Going to urgent care or your doctor creates a medical record that ties your symptoms directly to the crash — that matters a lot if this becomes a claim.

    • 4
      thankful-overpass434

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 10
    steady-badger-800

    Former claims rep here. A few things worth knowing: rideshare companies typically carry contingent coverage that kicks in during the 'app on, no passenger yet' phase, but the limits and deductibles vary. If the at-fault driver is identified through that plate, their liability coverage should actually be the first bucket of money — which could mean you don't end up paying that deductible at all. The platform's insurer won't always volunteer that information upfront. Also, get to a doctor ASAP. Headaches and neck stiffness after a rear-end are real and they need to be documented, not just mentioned in passing.

  • 10
    gentle-lynx-970

    A couple of practical steps: First, request a copy of the police report as soon as it's available — you'll need it for everything. Second, write down your own detailed account of the accident right now while it's fresh (time, direction of travel, app status, what you saw, what happened after). Third, don't give a recorded statement to any insurance company — yours, theirs, or the platform's — without knowing your rights first. Recorded statements have a way of being used against claimants later.

  • 8
    quiet-badger-125

    Ugh, I went through almost this exact runaround. Was also driving for a rideshare when someone clipped me and the 'who covers this' question turned into weeks of back and forth. What I eventually learned is that the coverage situation changes depending on whether you had a passenger accepted, were waiting for one, or were just logged into the app. That middle stage — app on, waiting for a match — is kind of a gray zone. Make sure you document exactly what status you were in on the app at the time of the crash.

    • 8
      patient-passenger780

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 7
    bright-mole-702

    This sounds so stressful on top of already being shaken up from the accident itself. Please don't try to navigate all the insurance stuff alone while you're still feeling off physically. Talk to someone who knows this area before you respond to anything official.

    • 4
      mellow-co-pilot326

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

    • 8
      hopeful-neighbor737

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.