Accidents move fast. This guide doesn't. Every step below is attorney-reviewed and specific to Atlanta, Georgia law — so you don't miss what matters.
Georgia's 3-foot passing law (O.C.G.A. § 40-6-56) requires drivers to give cyclists at least 3 feet of clearance when passing. Violating this law is negligence per se — meaning the driver's fault is established automatically. The 2-year SOL (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33) applies. Cyclists are not required to wear helmets in Georgia, but helmet use affects injury documentation and comparative fault arguments.
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Your Bicycle Accidents
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The Atlanta BeltLine, Decatur's protected bike lanes, and the Freedom Park Trail are the city's most-used cycling corridors — and the sites of a growing number of serious bicycle-car collisions as Atlanta's cycling infrastructure expands faster than driver awareness.
Why This Matters — And What Insurers Won't Tell You
Bicycle accident injuries in Atlanta are typically severe. Insurers aggressively argue cyclist fault — claiming the cyclist ran a red light, rode outside the bike lane, or was not visible. Dashcam footage from the at-fault vehicle, traffic camera coverage of BeltLine intersections, and witness accounts are the primary liability evidence in bicycle claims.
Georgia's 3-foot passing law (O.C.G.A. § 40-6-56) makes a driver's failure to maintain safe clearance from a cyclist negligence per se — the driver's fault is legally established without further proof of carelessness.
The Atlanta BeltLine and Decatur protected bike lanes have increased cycling volumes significantly — and with them, the number of bicycle-vehicle collision claims in Fulton and DeKalb counties.
Source: O.C.G.A. § 40-6-56 (As of 2025 Session)
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Check My Eligibility →What To Do Next
- 1
Call 911 — a crash report is required.
- 2
Photograph the vehicle's position relative to the bike lane or road edge, and measure or estimate the passing distance.
- 3
Get witness contacts — 3-foot violation claims benefit from corroboration.
- 4
Seek emergency medical care — cycling injuries often include TBI even without obvious head impact.
- 5
Preserve your bicycle as evidence of impact direction and force.

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How much is your case worth in Georgia?
Statewide settlement data by injury type, verified by Seth Bader, J.D..
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Georgia 3-foot bicycle passing requirement | 3 feet minimum clearance when passing | O.C.G.A. § 40-6-56 |
| Georgia adult helmet requirement for cyclists | None (adults) — under 16 required | O.C.G.A. § 40-6-294 |
| SOL — bicycle injury claim | 2 years | O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- 1
Not preserving the bicycle
it shows impact direction and helps reconstruct the crash.
- 2
Assuming no helmet means reduced recovery
adult cyclists are not required to wear helmets in Georgia.
- 3
Failing to request dashcam footage from the at-fault vehicle immediately.
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More Help
How to Get Your Accident Report
Step-by-step guide to requesting your Georgia crash report from GSP or the GSCCCA crash portal.
Find a Trusted Auto Body Shop
Vetted collision repair shops in Atlanta — insurance-approved and independently rated.
Lowball Settlement Offers
How to detect and counter a lowball insurance offer after your accident in Georgia.
Insurance Claim Denied?
Steps to take when your insurer denies or undervalues your claim — including O.C.G.A. § 33-4-6 bad faith.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Georgia require cyclists to wear helmets?▼
Adults (16+) are not required to wear helmets in Georgia. Riders under 16 must wear a helmet under O.C.G.A. § 40-6-294. However, not wearing a helmet as an adult does not automatically reduce your recovery — an insurer must prove the helmet absence actually caused or worsened your specific head injuries.
What is Georgia's 3-foot passing law and how does it help my claim?▼
O.C.G.A. § 40-6-56 requires drivers to give cyclists at least 3 feet of clearance when passing. Violating this law is negligence per se under Georgia law — meaning you don't need to prove the driver was careless, only that they violated the statute. This significantly strengthens liability in side-swipe and passing-distance claims.
Sources & Citations
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