Intersection Bicycle Accident Lawyers in Georgia & South Carolina
Intersections are the most dangerous locations for cyclists. The NHTSA reports that a substantial majority of fatal and serious-injury bicycle crashes occur at or near intersections, where the convergence of turning vehicles, through-traffic, traffic signals, and cyclist movements creates numerous conflict points. Unlike motorists, cyclists have no protection in a collision — no airbags, no steel frame, no crumple zones — making intersection crashes disproportionately devastating.
At Roden Law, our bicycle accident attorneys represent cyclists injured at intersections throughout Georgia and South Carolina. We investigate every aspect of the crash — signal timing, driver behavior, intersection design, and visibility conditions — to establish clear liability and maximize compensation.
How Intersection Bicycle Accidents Happen
Intersection bicycle crashes occur in several common patterns:
- Right-hook and left-cross collisions: Turning vehicles that cut across a cyclist’s straight-line path — the most common intersection bicycle crash pattern
- Red-light and stop-sign violations: Drivers who run red lights or roll through stop signs, striking cyclists who have the right of way
- Failure to yield: Drivers entering an intersection without yielding to a cyclist who has the right of way
- Right-turn-on-red conflicts: Drivers turning right on red who focus on oncoming traffic from the left and fail to check for cyclists approaching from the right
- Blind spot accidents: Large vehicles (trucks, buses, SUVs) whose drivers cannot see a cyclist positioned beside or behind the vehicle at an intersection
- Roundabout collisions: Drivers entering roundabouts without yielding to cyclists already in the circle
Intersection Design and Government Liability
Poor intersection design significantly increases cyclist crash risk. Hazardous design features include bike lanes that disappear at intersections, lack of bike-specific signal phases, right-turn lanes that cross bike lanes without merge zones, inadequate sight lines at corners, and absence of bike boxes (advanced stop lines) that position cyclists visibly ahead of motor vehicles.
When deficient intersection design contributes to a bicycle crash, the government entity responsible may share liability. Claims against government entities require compliance with Georgia’s Tort Claims Act (O.C.G.A. § 50-21-20 et seq.) or South Carolina’s Tort Claims Act (S.C. Code § 15-78-10 et seq.), including specific notice requirements.
Traffic Laws Protecting Cyclists at Intersections
Georgia and South Carolina grant cyclists equal rights on the roadway:
- Georgia: O.C.G.A. § 40-6-294 provides cyclists the same rights as vehicle drivers at intersections. Drivers must yield to cyclists with the right of way, just as they must yield to other vehicles.
- South Carolina: S.C. Code § 56-5-3435 grants cyclists identical rights and duties as motor vehicle operators, including the right of way at intersections when traveling with a green signal or stop-sign priority.
Proving Liability in Intersection Crashes
Our attorneys use traffic camera footage, witness statements, police reports, bicycle-mounted camera footage, and accident reconstruction to establish exactly who had the right of way and how the crash occurred. We also identify contributing factors like distracted driving, impaired driving, and intersection design defects.
Compensation for Intersection Bicycle Injuries
Cyclists injured at intersections may recover medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, permanent disability, bicycle and equipment replacement, and emotional distress. Intersection bicycle crashes often result in severe injuries — traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, and multiple fractures — supporting substantial damage awards under Georgia (O.C.G.A. Title 51) and South Carolina law.
