Practice Area

Bicycle Accidents

Hero Answer

How do bicycle accident claims work in Arizona?

Bicycle accident claims often involve determining whether a driver, road condition, property condition, or another party caused the crash. Evidence may include police reports, medical records, photos, witness statements, bicycle damage, vehicle damage, and insurance information.

  • Save photos of the bicycle, helmet, gear, vehicle, and roadway.
  • Document routes such as Mill Avenue, Rural Road, Scottsdale Road, or other local corridors when relevant.
  • Track medical treatment, work limits, and insurance communication.

Bicycle Accident Lawyers in Scottsdale, AZ Giving Clients Hope

Biking is a popular way to get where you need to go and stay healthy in Scottsdale. However, this enjoyable pastime can quickly turn tragic when a bicycle crash occurs. A collision when cycling can be devastating for bicycle riders because of the lack of basic protection that the bicycle affords. Unlike car drivers, bikers are almost totally exposed to the impact of the other object in the collision.


Bicycle accident injury claim

If you or a loved one is suffering from a bicycle injury, you may be tempted to take a settlement from the driver’s car insurance policy. However, the insurer rarely offers a fair deal to the accident victim because they hope the injured individual will take the money and walk away. You deserve better. You should reach out to a bicycle accident attorney immediately after experiencing a bike accident to recover the full damages you deserve, including medical costs, lost income, and more.

The talented legal team at Lazzara Law Firm can help you seek compensation by negotiating with the insurance company and opening a bicycle accident lawsuit. Our bike accident lawyers have been helping injured cyclists like you recover damages after a cycling accident for decades. We know how expensive and stressful it is to pay for medical treatment while recovering from a personal injury. We use our honesty, skill, and experience to pursue compensation for your bicycle accident injury. Call today for a free case evaluation at (480) 456-3080.

Bicycle accident evidence for Arizona injury claims

Bicycle accident claims often depend on fast-disappearing evidence. A damaged bike may be repaired, a vehicle may leave with little visible damage, road debris may be cleared, and nearby camera footage may be overwritten. Preserving the scene, the bicycle, and the medical timeline helps show how the collision happened and why the injuries are connected to it.

Document the location in detail. Photograph bike lanes, crosswalks, traffic controls, driveways, parked vehicles, construction cones, lighting, sight lines, shoulder width, and road-surface conditions. If the crash involved a right hook, left turn, dooring incident, unsafe pass, driveway exit, or intersection conflict, the exact movement of each person should be written down while memories are fresh.

The bicycle and gear can tell an important story. Keep photos of frame damage, wheel damage, handlebar position, lights, reflectors, helmet impact marks, torn clothing, bags, pedals, phone mounts, and other equipment. Save repair estimates, replacement receipts, and any bike-shop notes describing the damage. These details can help match the injuries to the impact.

Medical records should capture both obvious trauma and symptoms that develop later. Cyclists may suffer wrist, shoulder, collarbone, knee, hip, spinal, or head injuries after being thrown or forced to fall. Keep emergency records, imaging, referrals, therapy notes, prescriptions, and restrictions on riding, driving, typing, lifting, walking, or working.

Driver statements and insurance positions should be preserved carefully. If a driver says they did not see the cyclist, were turning, were looking at traffic, or believed the cyclist appeared suddenly, those statements may be relevant to visibility and attention. Keep all claim numbers, letters, repair discussions, and requests for a recorded statement.

Daily-life evidence matters because bicycle injuries can interrupt transportation, work, exercise, school, errands, and family responsibilities. Track missed shifts, rides you could not take, costs for alternate transportation, help needed at home, and changes in activity level. Those practical consequences help explain the difference between a minor property claim and a serious injury claim.

Arizona deadlines and insurance rules can depend on the parties involved. A crash with a private driver is not always handled the same way as a crash involving a delivery vehicle, rideshare driver, government vehicle, unsafe roadway condition, or commercial property. Early review helps identify who needs notice and which evidence should be preserved.

Records that help clarify the claim

  • Scene photos showing traffic controls, bike lanes, crosswalks, driveways, and lighting.
  • Photos of bicycle damage, helmet damage, torn clothing, lights, and accessories.
  • Driver information, witness names, report numbers, and camera-location notes.
  • Medical records, imaging, therapy notes, and activity restrictions.
  • Bike repair estimates, replacement receipts, and transportation expenses.
  • Notes about missed work, riding limitations, pain, and help needed at home.

Lazzara Law Firm can review the roadway details, injury documentation, and insurance coverage together so a bicycle claim is not treated as a small property-damage dispute.

Bike-lane and route details to note

If the route was familiar, note how the crash location differed from normal conditions: blocked bike lanes, parked vehicles, construction signs, poor pavement, traffic queues, lighting, or delivery activity. Those details can show why the driver should have anticipated cyclists or why the rider had limited safe options.

Preserve any route data from a cycling computer, phone app, smartwatch, or map history. Speed, path, and timestamp information can help respond to claims that the cyclist appeared unexpectedly or was traveling somewhere other than the documented route.

Common bicycle crash disputes to prepare for

Bicycle crash disputes often focus on visibility, lane position, signaling, speed, lighting, and whether the cyclist or driver had the right of way. The best time to document those facts is before the intersection, bike lane, shoulder, or parking area changes. Photos from the cyclist’s direction of travel and the driver’s direction of travel can make the same location easier to understand later.

Do not overlook the economic effect of losing the bicycle itself. For some injured cyclists, the bike is transportation to work, school, appointments, or family obligations. Save receipts for repairs, replacement parts, rideshare trips, bus fare, missed work, and temporary transportation. Those records help show that the crash caused practical disruption even before the medical recovery is complete.

If the crash involved a door opening, driveway exit, parked vehicle, delivery driver, or road hazard, identify the property, vehicle, business, or person connected to that condition. Bicycle claims can involve more than the driver who made contact, and early documentation may identify another responsible party or insurance source.

Your Recovery Deserves a Real Legal Strategy.

No Pressure * No Fees 
Connect with the firm that knows your worth

Call For Free Consultation

Arizona Injury Claim FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

What are common causes of bicycle accidents in Arizona?

Common causes include drivers failing to yield, unsafe turns, dooring, distracted driving, speeding, impaired driving, poor road design, debris, and drivers not leaving enough space when passing.

Can I bring a bicycle accident claim if I was not wearing a helmet?

Not wearing a helmet does not automatically prevent a claim. An insurer may argue comparative fault if a head injury is involved, but it must connect the lack of helmet to the injury and damages.

What evidence helps in a bicycle accident case?

Helpful evidence includes photos of the scene and bicycle, police reports, witness statements, helmet and gear damage, medical records, driver information, nearby camera footage, and repair estimates.

What is the deadline for an Arizona bicycle accident lawsuit?

Most bicycle accident lawsuits must be filed within two years under A.R.S. § 12-542. Shorter deadlines can apply if a public entity is involved.