Hurt in an Uber or Lyft? The App Decides Who Pays

Knowledge Base · AI & the Law

Hurt in an Uber or Lyft? The App Decides Who Pays

By Attorney Manny Chahal · Updated July 2026 · Reading time: ~7 min

After a rideshare crash in Michigan, the size of the insurance available to you is decided by a piece of software: the driver’s app. Whether the driver was offline, waiting for a ping, on the way to a pickup, or carrying you as a passenger determines whether the coverage is a personal policy, a smaller company policy, or a $1,000,000 commercial policy. Michigan wrote these tiers into law in the Transportation Network Company Act, and the key insurance section is MCL 257.2123. This guide explains, in plain English, how the app’s status log controls your claim and what to do about it.

The Three App Periods That Control the Money

Uber and Lyft coverage in Michigan is tiered by what the app says the driver was doing at the moment of the crash. The company’s own records, generated automatically by its dispatch algorithm, are the evidence insurers use to pick the tier.

App status at crashCoverage that appliesMinimum required by MCL 257.2123
App offDriver’s personal auto policy onlyStandard Michigan minimums
Logged on, waiting for a ride requestPrimary automobile insurance required by the TNC act$50,000 per person / $100,000 per crash for injury, $25,000 property damage
Ride accepted or passenger in the carTNC commercial policy$1,000,000 combined single limit
Why this matters: The difference between “logged on and waiting” and “en route to a pickup” can be the difference between a $50,000 policy and a $1,000,000 policy. The timestamp in the company’s server logs decides it, so those records must be demanded and preserved early. The law helps you here: under MCL 257.2123(8), the driver must disclose, on request, whether they were logged on or engaged in a prearranged ride at the time of the crash.

Your Medical Bills: No-Fault Comes First

Michigan no-fault still pays your medical bills and wage loss after a rideshare crash, regardless of fault, under MCL 500.3105. Which insurer pays is governed by the priority rules in MCL 500.3114, and priority can be contested in rideshare cases because the statute treats vehicles in the passenger-transport business specially and contains a specific carve-out for transportation network company vehicles. In broad strokes:

  • Usually you start with your own auto policy. If you carry Michigan no-fault insurance, your claim ordinarily begins with your own insurer, even as a passenger in someone else’s car.
  • A household policy is often next. No policy of your own? A spouse’s or resident relative’s policy is typically the next stop, though the rideshare vehicle’s insurer may be implicated depending on how MCL 500.3114 applies to the facts.
  • The Michigan Assigned Claims Plan is the backstop. If no coverage applies, you apply through the Assigned Claims Plan, where allowable benefits are capped at $250,000. Deadlines there are unforgiving.

Do not guess at priority. Filing with the wrong insurer can burn months, and the one-year notice clock does not pause while carriers point at each other.

If the PIP insurer pays late, the no-fault act adds 12% annual penalty interest on overdue benefits under MCL 500.3142, and attorney fees can shift to the insurer under MCL 500.3148 when a denial was unreasonable.

Your Injury Claim: Where the $1,000,000 Policy Comes In

Pain and suffering and excess economic losses are a separate claim against the at-fault driver. You must cross Michigan’s “serious impairment of body function” threshold under MCL 500.3135, as interpreted in McCormick v Carrier, 487 Mich 180 (2010). If your rideshare driver caused the crash during a ride, the TNC’s $1,000,000 policy is the target. If a third driver caused it, you pursue that driver’s liability coverage, and the rideshare tiers still matter for any underinsured layers.

Expect a fight over the app data. Rideshare companies classify drivers as independent contractors and their insurers argue over which period applies. The algorithmic trip log, GPS trail, and dispatch records are all discoverable, and they frequently tell a more precise story than either driver’s memory.

Deadlines: Written notice to the PIP insurer within 1 year (MCL 500.3145), and generally 3 years to sue for your injuries (MCL 600.5805(2)). Assigned Claims Plan applications have their own strict timing. Do not sit on a rideshare claim.

What to Do in the First Week

  • Screenshot everything. Your ride receipt, the trip map, the driver’s name and vehicle, and the time stamps. Your rider app history is evidence of which period applied.
  • Report to your own insurer. Your PIP claim starts with your own policy in most cases, and the one-year notice clock is already running.
  • Get examined and follow through with care. Gaps in treatment are the first thing insurers use to discount rideshare injury claims.
  • Do not give the TNC insurer a recorded statement before you understand which coverage tier is in play and what your injuries are.
  • Get counsel involved early so preservation demands reach the rideshare company before routine data cycling erases the details.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens if my Lyft or Uber driver gets in an accident while I am a passenger?

Your medical bills and wage loss are paid by no-fault PIP, usually through your own or a household auto policy, or through the Assigned Claims Plan if you have none. For pain and suffering, the TNC’s $1,000,000 liability policy applies while a passenger is in the car, whether your driver or another motorist caused the crash determines whose liability coverage you pursue.

Can a passenger get compensation if the Uber crashes?

Yes. Passengers are almost never at fault, which removes Michigan’s comparative fault reduction from the picture. You have a PIP claim for economic losses and, if your injuries meet the MCL 500.3135 threshold, a liability claim against whoever caused the crash.

How much is the average Uber passenger settlement in Michigan?

There is no meaningful average. Value turns on the severity and permanence of your injuries, your medical proof, the coverage tier the app data supports, and how the serious impairment threshold applies to your life. Be skeptical of any calculator or chatbot that quotes you a number without your records.

What if the rideshare driver was waiting for a ping when I was hit?

Then the smaller logged-on tier applies: at least $50,000 per person and $100,000 per crash under MCL 257.2123. Confirming the app status with the company’s own records, rather than taking the insurer’s word for it, is often where these cases are won or lost.

Hurt in a rideshare crash? Get the app data working for you, not against you.

Attorney Manny Chahal will pin down the coverage tier, secure the trip records, and pursue every layer of insurance available. Free consultation. No fee unless we recover. Call 1-844-MCHAHAL.

Call 1-844-624-2425