When someone is hurt in a car accident involving a rideshare service like Uber or Lyft, the aftermath is rarely simple. Kansas City rideshare accidents often involve multiple insurance policies and potentially several liable parties, making the path to compensation more complex than traditional collisions.
At Devkota Law Firm, we understand how stressful this process can feel and how important it is to have clear answers from the start.
Rideshare accidents differ from everyday car accidents because liability depends heavily on whether the driver was logged into the app, waiting for a passenger, or actively transporting a rider. This matters because each stage triggers a different level of insurance coverage from the rideshare company. For victims, that means identifying fault is only the first step, since coverage may change instantly depending on the driver’s status.
Missouri law gives injured parties a generous but firm timeline to act. According to Missouri Revised Statute §516.120, victims have up to five years from the date of the accident to file a personal injury claim. Waiting too long can shut the door on recovering compensation, even when the claim would otherwise have been valid.
Missouri also follows a comparative fault system, meaning compensation may be reduced if the injured person shares responsibility for the crash. Because these cases often involve multiple drivers and insurers pointing fingers at each other, building a clear legal strategy from the start makes a huge difference.
In Missouri, liability for rideshare accidents can involve several parties and multiple insurance policies. Depending on the driver’s status in the app, responsibility may fall on the driver’s personal insurer, the rideshare company’s tiered coverage, another motorist, or even a vehicle manufacturer. Victims are encouraged to seek medical care right away, report the incident, and preserve evidence like screenshots and receipts, since this documentation is often the key to determining which policy applies. Missouri law also gives injured parties up to five years to pursue compensation, but waiting can weaken a claim.
Liability in these types of accidents depends on the driver’s app status during the crash. Uber and Lyft provide tiered insurance policies that shift depending on whether the driver is offline, waiting for a request, en route to pick up a passenger, or actively transporting someone. Here’s a simple flowchart-style breakdown of how liability works:
According to the Missouri Department of Transportation, the state emphasizes roadway safety and data-driven policies to reduce collisions. This focus highlights why determining liability in rideshare cases is so important: with thousands of crashes occurring statewide each year, insurance carriers carefully examine fault before paying claims.
The steps you take right after a rideshare accident can either strengthen or weaken your ability to file a claim. Safety comes first, but protecting your legal rights begins in the first moments.
Taking these steps quickly helps protect your health, your rights, and your ability to pursue fair compensation.
Filing a rideshare accident claim in Kansas City is not as simple as contacting one insurance company. Multiple policies may overlap, and insurers often dispute who should pay. Here’s how the process usually unfolds:
At the end of the day, the claim process is designed to discourage victims from pursuing fair compensation on their own. Rideshare companies and their insurers have teams of lawyers protecting their interests, which is why having someone on your side who knows Missouri accident law makes a powerful difference.
Rideshare accidents in Kansas City often involve layers of insurance coverage, multiple liable parties, and complicated fault rules. Trying to sort this out on your own can quickly become overwhelming. Our team at Devkota Law Firm has fought for countless car accident victims, and we know how to uncover evidence, challenge insurance tactics, and pursue the compensation you deserve.
If you or a loved one were injured in a rideshare crash, don’t wait until time runs out under Missouri’s five-year statute of limitations. Call us at (816) 207-4255 to discuss your case and get answers you can trust.
Tarak Devkota has dedicated over 26 years to fighting for the rights of personal injury victims in Kansas and Missouri. With a proven record of over 100 cases tried to verdict, he combines aggressive trial preparation with a compassionate, client-focused approach to ensure insurance conglomerates pay the full value of every claim.
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