Car Accident
Car accidents are the most common personal injury claim in California. The at-fault driver is liable under negligence principles, and California's pure comparative fault system from Li v. Ye...
Car Accident guide →Uber and Lyft accidents in California are governed by the three-period insurance coverage framework under California Insurance Code Section 1758.8. The coverage period active at the time of the accident determines which insurance is primary
This page provides general legal information about rideshare accident claims in California. It does not provide legal advice. Consult a licensed California attorney for guidance specific to your situation.
Uber and Lyft accidents in California are governed by the three-period insurance coverage framework under California Insurance Code Section 1758.8. The coverage period active at the time of the accident determines which insurance is primary. Passengers injured in rideshare vehicles are protected during Periods 2 and 3 by the platform's $1 million commercial coverage. Drivers injured by rideshare vehicles have claims against the at-fault driver and potentially the platform.
California personal injury law provides a robust framework for rideshare accident victims. The governing legal standard depends on the type of injury: vehicle accidents proceed under negligence (with Vehicle Code violations establishing negligence per se); premises liability proceeds under the Rowland v. Christian (1968) duty of care; product liability proceeds under Greenman v. Yuba Power Products (1963) strict liability; and medical malpractice proceeds under MICRA's professional negligence standard with its specific damage caps and shorter statute of limitations.
California's pure comparative fault system from Li v. Yellow Cab Co. (1975) allows rideshare accident victims to recover damages even if they were partly at fault. Recovery is reduced proportionally by the victim's fault percentage but not eliminated. California imposes no cap on economic or non-economic damages in non-malpractice personal injury cases.
Liability in rideshare accident cases depends on the specific facts and the legal theory governing the injury type. For vehicle accidents: the at-fault driver and their employer (if driving for work). For premises liability: the property owner, lessee, or other party who controlled the property. For product liability: the manufacturer, distributor, and retailer in the entire distribution chain. For medical malpractice: the licensed healthcare provider and potentially the healthcare facility. For workplace accidents: the employer's workers' compensation insurer (exclusive remedy against the employer) and third-party defendants whose negligence contributed.
"Within two years: An action for assault, battery, or injury to, or for the death of, an individual caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another."
California rideshare accident victims can recover: all past and future medical expenses (no cap); lost wages and lost earning capacity; property damage; non-economic damages (pain, suffering, emotional distress, disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life) — uncapped in non-malpractice personal injury cases; and punitive damages under Civil Code Section 3294 when the defendant's conduct constitutes malice, oppression, or fraud. Medical malpractice non-economic damages are capped by MICRA at $470,000 (personal injury) and $650,000 (wrongful death) in 2026.
Two years from the date of injury under CCP Section 335.1 for most rideshare accident claims. Medical malpractice: one year from discovery or three years from the act (CCP Section 340.5). Government entity claims: six-month administrative claim under Government Code Section 945.4. Minor victims: tolled until age 18 under CCP Section 352. Missing any applicable deadline permanently bars the claim.
California Insurance Code Section 1758.8 establishes three coverage periods: Period 1 (app on, no ride accepted) — contingent platform coverage $50K/$100K/$25K; Period 2 (ride accepted, en route to pickup) — full platform commercial coverage; Period 3 (passenger in vehicle) — $1 million commercial coverage. The period active at the time of the accident determines which insurance is primary.
Yes. During an active Uber or Lyft ride (Period 3), the platform provides $1 million in commercial liability coverage for injuries to passengers, regardless of fault. If the Uber driver caused the accident, the platform's coverage applies. If another driver caused the accident, you have claims against both that driver's insurance and potentially the platform's $1 million commercial coverage as excess coverage.
For passenger injuries during an active ride, the platform's commercial insurance is the primary recovery mechanism. Direct liability claims against the platform are complicated by the independent contractor classification of drivers — though California AB 5 (Labor Code Section 2775) and Proposition 22 (2020) have created an ongoing legal battle over driver classification that affects platform liability exposure.
The same coverage period analysis applies. If the rideshare driver was in Period 2 or 3, the platform's commercial insurance is primary. If the driver was in Period 1, the driver's personal auto policy is primary (with contingent platform coverage if the personal policy excludes commercial use). If the driver's personal policy excludes commercial delivery use, your own uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage may provide additional recovery.
Two years from the date of the accident under CCP Section 335.1. Report the incident through the Uber or Lyft app immediately to preserve trip records establishing the coverage period. Send a written evidence preservation demand to the platform promptly.
Yes. Always report any accident to your own insurer regardless of fault. Your collision coverage pays for your vehicle damage regardless of fault. Your medical payments (MedPay) or PIP coverage provides immediate medical expense coverage. Your UM/UIM coverage is available if any defendant is uninsured or underinsured. Filing with your own insurer does not waive your right to sue the at-fault parties.
Car accidents are the most common personal injury claim in California. The at-fault driver is liable under negligence principles, and California's pure comparative fault system from Li v. Ye...
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