Lime, Bird & Rental E-Scooter Accident Claims
Shared electric scooter services from companies like Lime, Bird, Spin, and Veo have become a common sight in Georgia and South Carolina cities — particularly in tourist-heavy areas like downtown Savannah, Charleston’s King Street corridor, and Myrtle Beach’s boardwalk district. While these services offer affordable short-distance transportation, they also create significant safety risks. Riders often have minimal experience, receive no safety training before their first ride, and operate scooters without helmets in mixed traffic. According to a CDC study, nearly half of all e-scooter injury victims were on their first ride or had used a scooter fewer than ten times.
At Roden Law, our e-scooter accident attorneys handle the full spectrum of rental scooter injury claims — from rider injuries caused by scooter defects and malfunctions to pedestrian injuries caused by reckless riders, and vehicle collisions involving shared scooters.
How Ride-Share Scooter Companies Operate
Rental e-scooter companies use a “dockless” model — scooters are distributed throughout a city and users rent them via a smartphone app. Users agree to lengthy terms of service that typically include liability waivers and mandatory arbitration clauses. These contractual provisions can complicate injury claims, but they are not always enforceable. Georgia courts have invalidated unconscionable arbitration clauses and overbroad liability waivers, particularly when the injured party had no meaningful opportunity to negotiate the terms.
South Carolina similarly scrutinizes adhesion contracts under the South Carolina Uniform Arbitration Act and common law principles of unconscionability. Our attorneys aggressively challenge these waivers when they stand between our clients and fair compensation.
Liability in Ride-Share Scooter Accidents
Determining liability in a rental scooter accident involves analyzing multiple potential responsible parties:
- The scooter company: For fleet maintenance failures, defective scooters, inadequate safety warnings, negligent deployment in dangerous areas, and failure to enforce speed restrictions
- The scooter manufacturer: For design defects, manufacturing defects, and product liability claims when the scooter itself fails
- Other motorists: For negligent driving that causes or contributes to the accident
- Municipalities: For dangerous road conditions, inadequate infrastructure for micro-mobility devices, and failure to regulate scooter deployment
- The rider (if injured party is a third party): For reckless operation, sidewalk riding, or riding while intoxicated
Common Ride-Share Scooter Accident Causes
Rental scooter accidents frequently result from a combination of inexperienced riders and conditions unique to the shared scooter model:
- First-time riders unfamiliar with scooter handling, braking distances, and stability characteristics
- Scooter maintenance failures — worn brakes, underinflated tires, loose handlebars, and battery issues
- Riding on sidewalks or in pedestrian zones in violation of local regulations
- Operating scooters while impaired by alcohol, a particular concern in nightlife districts
- Collisions with vehicles at intersections (see e-scooter intersection crashes)
- Road hazards including potholes, trolley tracks, and debris (see road hazard e-scooter crashes)
Insurance and Compensation for Rental Scooter Injuries
Unlike car accidents where auto insurance provides a clear source of compensation, rental scooter accidents often involve less obvious insurance coverage. The scooter company’s commercial general liability policy is typically the primary source, but coverage limits and exclusions vary. Your own health insurance, uninsured motorist coverage, and any applicable umbrella policies may also come into play. Under Georgia law, the statute of limitations for personal injury is 2 years (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33), while South Carolina provides 3 years (S.C. Code § 15-3-530).
Why Choose Roden Law for Rental Scooter Accident Claims
Ride-share scooter cases involve a unique intersection of product liability, premises liability, and personal injury law. Our attorneys have the resources and experience to take on well-funded scooter companies and their insurance teams. We understand how to challenge arbitration clauses, identify all insurance coverage, and build cases that maximize your recovery. Contact us for a free consultation — we handle all e-scooter cases on a contingency fee basis.
