Injured in an Uber or Lyft? New York's no-fault deadline is 30 days from the accident date. Don't wait. Call Koenig Pierre now — free consultation.
NYC Rideshare Accident Law · Brooklyn Personal Injury

Uber and Lyft Accidents in NYC Are Surging —
Here's Who You Can Actually Sue

As a Brooklyn injury attorney, I've watched rideshare crashes become one of the most confusing — and most winnable — cases in New York personal injury law. Here's everything you need to know before you call anyone.

✍️ By Koenig Pierre, Esq. 📅 June 24, 2026 ⏱ 10 min read 📍 Brooklyn, NY

I want to tell you something that most lawyers won't admit up front: Uber and Lyft accident cases are some of the most complicated injury claims in New York — not because the law is mysterious, but because these companies have spent millions designing insurance structures meant to confuse you. I've seen injured passengers in Brooklyn and across the city walk away with far less than they deserved simply because they didn't understand how the system worked.

That changes right now. By the time you finish reading this, you'll know exactly who can be held responsible when a rideshare accident tears through your life, which insurance policies apply to your specific situation, and what you need to do — today — to protect your ability to recover full compensation.

✓ Successfully Handled Rideshare Accident Cases

I don't just write about these cases — I've successfully handled rideshare accident claims right here in Brooklyn and across New York City. My clients have included Uber and Lyft passengers seriously injured mid-trip, pedestrians struck by on-duty rideshare drivers, and cyclists doored or sideswiped by drivers distracted by the app. In each case, I identified every liable party, pursued every applicable insurance policy, and fought to put maximum compensation in my clients' hands. Rideshare accident law is what I do. When you call my office, you're talking to an attorney who has been through this process before — and who knows exactly what it takes to win.

Why Rideshare Crashes Are Exploding in NYC

New York City has more active Uber and Lyft drivers than almost anywhere else on the planet. According to the NYC Taxi & Limousine Commission, there are over 80,000 for-hire vehicles licensed to operate in the city on any given day. That's a staggering number of drivers — many of them fatigued, distracted by the app, or unfamiliar with Brooklyn's side streets — sharing the road with cyclists, pedestrians, and regular commuters.

The result? Serious crashes. Broken bones. Traumatic brain injuries. Spinal cord damage. And families in Brooklyn, Flatbush, Bed-Stuy, and Crown Heights left asking the same desperate question: What do I do now, and who is going to pay for this?

"Uber and Lyft have engineered their business model specifically to blur the line between employer and contractor. That line is exactly where your case lives." — Koenig Pierre, Esq., Brooklyn Personal Injury Attorney

The Big Question: Is the Driver an Employee or a Contractor?

Here's the argument Uber and Lyft make every single time someone tries to hold them accountable: "We're just a technology platform. The driver is an independent contractor. Talk to their insurance." Courts have wrestled with this question for years.

In Salamon v. Our Lady of Victory Hospital, 514 F.3d 217 (2d Cir. 2008), the Second Circuit examined the factors that distinguish an employee from an independent contractor under New York law — including who controls the work, who supplies the tools, and the permanency of the relationship. Applied to rideshare, courts have had to weigh Uber's tight control over driver ratings, pricing, and routing against their contractual classification of drivers as non-employees.

More recently, in Matter of Lowry (Uber Tech., Inc.), 61 Misc.3d 1213(A) (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2018), a New York court examined the degree of behavioral control Uber exercises over its drivers. While outcomes vary, the trend in New York is toward greater accountability — and an experienced NYC rideshare accident lawyer knows how to use this.

The practical upshot: even if you can't directly sue Uber or Lyft as an employer, the company's massive insurance policies are absolutely on the table — and those policies can be worth up to $1.25 million per incident.

The Three Coverage Periods — This Is Where Your Case Lives

Uber and Lyft insurance doesn't work like regular car insurance. It's structured in phases — and which phase the driver was in at the moment of your accident determines everything. Under New York Vehicle & Traffic Law § 370-a, Transportation Network Companies are required to maintain specific coverage levels tied to these periods.

Coverage PeriodDriver StatusUber / Lyft CoverageWho It Affects
Period 0 — App OFFPersonal driving, not workingDriver's personal insurance onlyAnyone struck by the vehicle
Period 1 — App ON, No Ride AcceptedWaiting for a matchContingent: $50K / $100K liability + $25K property damageThird parties, pedestrians, cyclists
Period 2 — Ride Accepted, En Route to PickupDriving to pick up passenger$1.25 million liability + UM/UIMThird parties, pedestrians, cyclists
Period 3 — Passenger In VehicleActive trip in progress$1.25 million liability + UM/UIMPassengers, third parties

One of the first things I do when a client comes to me after a rideshare crash is nail down exactly which period applied. A driver who just dropped off a passenger and was looking for the next ride? Period 1 rules. A driver with you in the back seat? Period 3 — and $1.25 million is in play. These aren't small distinctions.

⚠️ Critical Deadline

You have 30 days to file a no-fault claim in New York.

  • New York is a no-fault state. Your immediate medical bills and lost wages (up to $50,000) are covered by the vehicle's PIP insurance — regardless of who caused the crash.
  • You must file a no-fault application within 30 days of the accident or you risk losing those benefits entirely.
  • For a lawsuit, the general statute of limitations is 3 years under CPLR § 214 — but this can be shorter in certain situations.
  • Don't wait. Contact my office today for a free case evaluation.

Who Exactly Can You Sue? All Your Options.

When I take a rideshare accident case, I never assume there's only one defendant. There are often multiple parties whose negligence contributed to what happened. Here's how I think through it:

1. The Uber or Lyft Driver

This is always the starting point. The driver owes every passenger and every person on the road a duty of reasonable care. When they violate that duty — by speeding, running a light, checking the app while driving, or driving while fatigued — they are personally liable. New York's negligence framework, established in Palsgraf v. Long Island Railroad Co., 248 N.Y. 339 (1928), remains the foundational standard: defendants are liable for foreseeable harms caused by their negligent conduct.

2. Uber or Lyft (the Company)

Even where direct employer liability is contested, the company may be liable under theories of negligent hiring, negligent retention, or negligent supervision — particularly if the driver had a prior record of dangerous driving that Uber or Lyft knew about or should have discovered through proper background checks. New York courts recognize these claims. See Kenneth R. v. Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn, 229 A.D.2d 159 (2d Dep't 1997).

3. Another Driver (Third-Party Negligence)

Sometimes the Uber or Lyft driver wasn't at fault — another vehicle caused the collision. You still have full legal recourse against that driver, and Uber and Lyft's uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage can step in if that driver lacked sufficient insurance.

4. The City of New York (Road Conditions)

If a pothole, broken traffic signal, or poorly maintained road contributed to your accident, the City may share liability. Important: claims against New York City require a Notice of Claim filed within 90 days. This is one of the most frequently missed deadlines in all of personal injury law.

Were You Injured in a Brooklyn Rideshare Accident?

I offer free, confidential case evaluations to every injured person — with no obligation and no fee unless we win.

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What New York's No-Fault Law Actually Means for You

New York is one of a small number of no-fault insurance states. Under New York Insurance Law § 5102, injured people can collect up to $50,000 in Personal Injury Protection benefits for medical expenses and 80% of lost wages — no matter who was at fault. This applies to you as a passenger, as a pedestrian who was struck, or as another driver involved in the crash.

Here's what no-fault does not cover: your pain and suffering, your permanent injuries, your emotional trauma, and your economic losses beyond $50,000. To pursue those damages, you must clear what the law calls the "serious injury" threshold — defined in Insurance Law § 5102(d) as conditions including fractures, significant disfigurement, and permanent loss of use of a body organ.

In practice, most of my clients who come in after a serious rideshare crash do meet this threshold. The key is proper medical documentation from day one — which is another reason why getting an attorney involved early matters so much.

What to Do Right Now If You Were Just in a Rideshare Accident

The decisions you make in the first 48 hours after an accident will shape your entire case. Here's the framework I give every client.

01

Get Medical Help

Go to the ER or urgent care immediately — even if you feel "fine." Adrenaline masks pain. Delayed treatment gaps will be used against you.

02

Document Everything

Screenshot your Uber/Lyft app showing the trip details, driver name, and time. Photograph the scene and all vehicles before leaving.

03

Get Witness Info

Exchange contact information with any bystanders. Eyewitnesses can be the difference between a disputed claim and a clear liability finding.

04

Don't Talk to Adjusters Alone

Insurance adjusters work for the company, not for you. Their job is to minimize what they pay. Say nothing without your attorney present.

05

Call an Attorney Now

Multiple deadlines start running the moment your crash happens. A Brooklyn rideshare injury lawyer protects all of them from day one.

A Word About Brooklyn Specifically

I practice right here in Brooklyn. My office is on Coney Island Avenue. I know Flatbush Avenue at rush hour. I know what Atlantic Terminal looks like when an Uber driver is circling for a pickup. I know the intersections in Bed-Stuy and Crown Heights where cyclists and pedestrians are most vulnerable.

I also know that a significant portion of my Brooklyn clients are immigrant families — Haitian, Caribbean, Latinx — who may not fully understand their legal rights, who may be hesitant to take on a billion-dollar corporation, or who may have been told by an insurance adjuster that they don't have a case. They do. And I fight for them.

If you were hurt in a rideshare accident anywhere in Brooklyn — from Bay Ridge to Bushwick, from Canarsie to Clinton Hill — you have rights under New York law, and you have options. My consultations are completely free, completely confidential, and available in English, Spanish, and Haitian Creole.

A Real Brooklyn Rideshare Accident — What Happened and What We Did

I want to share a case that captures exactly why every minute matters after a rideshare crash — and what it looks like when an injured family does everything right from the very first moment.

⚖️
📍 Ocean Ave between Glenwood Rd & Ave H
🚗 Uber Driver — Active Trip
Red Light Violation · T-Bone Impact
👥 Elderly Woman & Adult Daughter

The call came in while the sirens were still approaching. A daughter had her phone in her hand and did something most people don't think to do in those first terrifying minutes after a crash — she looked up a lawyer and called me. She and her mother were still sitting inside the vehicle on Ocean Avenue between Glenwood Road and Avenue H — one of Brooklyn's most dangerous corridors for vehicle crashes — waiting for the ambulance.

What happened was clear in terms of liability but devastating in terms of impact. Their Uber driver entered an intersection and ran a red light. Another vehicle with the right of way struck them in a full T-bone collision — the kind of impact that sends shockwaves through everyone in both vehicles. The elderly mother bore the worst of it. Her daughter was shaken, scared, and already sensing that something was seriously wrong.

From the moment I picked up that call, we got to work. With the daughter still standing at the scene, I walked her through exactly what to collect. I told her to open the Uber app immediately and screenshot the active trip — the driver's name, vehicle, route, and timestamp. I told her to photograph every vehicle from multiple angles, capture the position of the cars in the intersection, and look for any traffic or security cameras on nearby buildings along Ocean Avenue — a detail most people would never think of while in shock.

Then we handled the reporting. I guided her through how to report the accident to Uber directly through the app, which triggered the company's internal incident documentation process and put them on notice immediately. This matters enormously — early notice to Uber preserves trip data, driver logs, and GPS records that can disappear or become unavailable if you wait days or weeks.

By the time the ambulance arrived and transported her mother to the hospital, we had already done what most accident victims take days to figure out — and by then, it's often too late. The evidence was preserved. Uber's internal records were flagged. And the family had an attorney actively protecting their case from minute one.

Because their Uber driver was actively transporting a passenger at the time of the crash — Period 3 under the coverage framework I described above — Uber's $1.25 million liability policy was fully in play. The case moved forward with a clear liability picture, preserved digital evidence, and a family that understood their rights from the very first hour.

💡 The takeaway: You don't have to wait until you're home, or until you've seen a doctor, or until you've "figured things out" to call an attorney. The daughter in this case called me from the scene — and that single decision shaped how their entire case was built. If you or someone you love is ever in this situation, call my office immediately: 1-800-946-4616. I answer.
📋 Related Reading

Other situations where insurance coverage gets complicated:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sue Uber or Lyft directly after a car accident in New York City?
In most cases, Uber and Lyft classify their drivers as independent contractors, which shields them from direct employer liability. However, New York law may still allow you to pursue the company under negligent hiring or supervision theories, and both apps carry substantial insurance policies — up to $1.25 million per incident when the driver is actively on a trip. A knowledgeable NYC rideshare accident lawyer can identify every avenue for recovery.
What insurance covers me if I'm injured as a passenger in an Uber or Lyft in Brooklyn?
When you're a passenger in an active Uber or Lyft ride, both companies provide $1.25 million in third-party liability coverage and uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage. New York also requires no-fault (PIP) benefits, which cover your medical bills and lost wages regardless of who caused the crash. A Brooklyn rideshare accident attorney can help you maximize recovery across all available policies.
How long do I have to file an Uber or Lyft accident lawsuit in New York?
New York's statute of limitations for personal injury is generally three years from the date of the accident under CPLR § 214. However, if a government-owned vehicle was also involved, you may have as little as 90 days to file a notice of claim. Acting quickly protects your evidence and your legal rights — contact a NYC rideshare injury lawyer as soon as possible.
What if the Uber driver was logged into the app but hadn't accepted a ride yet when they hit me?
This is "Period 1" coverage — app on, no ride accepted. During this phase, Uber and Lyft provide reduced contingent liability: $50,000 per person, $100,000 per accident, and $25,000 for property damage. The driver's personal insurance is primary. An experienced rideshare accident attorney in New York will make sure every applicable layer of insurance is pursued.
I was hit by an Uber driver while walking in Brooklyn — can I still make a claim?
Yes. Pedestrians and cyclists struck by rideshare drivers are entitled to bring personal injury claims in New York. If the driver was on an active trip, Uber or Lyft's $1.25 million liability policy applies. New York's no-fault law also covers pedestrians hit by any motor vehicle for medical bills and lost wages. A Brooklyn pedestrian accident attorney can file claims against both the driver and the rideshare company.
What compensation can I recover after being injured in an Uber or Lyft accident in New York?
Beyond no-fault benefits, you may be entitled to compensation for pain and suffering, permanent injuries, lost future earnings, and medical expenses that exceed no-fault limits — provided your injuries meet New York's "serious injury" threshold under Insurance Law § 5102(d). Schedule a free consultation to evaluate your specific situation.
Koenig Pierre, Esq. — Brooklyn Personal Injury Attorney
Written & Reviewed By
Koenig Pierre, Esq.
Brooklyn Personal Injury Attorney · New York State Bar

Koenig Pierre is a New York personal injury attorney based in Brooklyn, NY, dedicated exclusively to representing injured people and their families throughout New York City and Long Island. He handles car accidents, rideshare crashes, construction accidents, medical malpractice, and wrongful death claims — with a particular focus on serving Brooklyn's immigrant communities in English, Spanish, and Haitian Creole. Attorney Pierre is admitted to practice in New York and is listed on Justia. He founded his practice on a single principle: "All you need is wise counsel."

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Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this content does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws change and individual circumstances vary. For advice specific to your situation, contact Koenig Pierre, Esq. directly.