Sarah had always enjoyed riding her motorcycle. For her, it was a way to clear her mind and enjoy the open road.
One day, while riding along the highway, a car suddenly moved into her lane. The collision happened quickly, leaving Sarah with no meaningful time to react.
The impact threw Sarah from her motorcycle. She landed heavily on the road, suffering multiple injuries. Her helmet helped protect her head, but she was left with a broken leg, bruised ribs, and back pain.
Emergency services arrived, and Sarah was taken for medical treatment. In the days that followed, she faced uncertainty about her recovery, her ability to work, and the damage to her motorcycle.
Motorcycle riders have less physical protection than people inside cars, trucks, or other enclosed vehicles. Even where a rider is wearing a helmet and protective gear, a collision can still result in significant injury.
Motorcycle accident injuries may include:
In Sarah’s situation, the injuries affected her mobility, daily routine, and ability to return to ordinary activities.
Motorcycle accidents may involve questions about road position, lane changes, visibility, speed, and whether each road user had enough time to react.
Where a car moves into a motorcyclist’s lane, relevant questions may include:
These details may help explain how the accident occurred.
After a motorcycle accident, records may assist in understanding the sequence of events and the impact of the injuries.
Relevant records may include:
These records may be relevant where there is disagreement about lane position, driver behaviour, visibility, or how the collision occurred.
Sarah’s injuries involved a broken leg, bruised ribs, and back pain. Injuries of this kind may affect mobility, sleep, driving, working, and daily activities.
Treatment and recovery may involve:
Recovery may take time and may involve changes to work duties, transport, home routines, and physical activity.
A motorcycle accident involving a motor vehicle may involve a Compulsory Third Party, or CTP, process. A CTP process generally relates to personal injuries arising from motor vehicle accidents and may involve consideration of fault, injury, and loss.
Damage to the motorcycle is usually a separate issue from personal injury. Repairs, replacement, towing, storage, and property damage may involve different insurance processes.
The relevant process depends on: