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.
Rideshare insurance coverage in Georgia depends on the driver's status at the time of the crash. Georgia law (O.C.G.A. § 33-1-24) requires TNCs to maintain:
- App off: Driver's personal insurance only
- App on, no passenger: $50,000/$100,000 BI + $25,000 PD (TNC contingent coverage)
- Passenger in vehicle or en route: $1,000,000 commercial liability policy
The 2-year statute of limitations (O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33) applies to rideshare claims. Do not accept any offer from a rideshare insurer without consulting an attorney — TNC claims teams are experienced at minimizing payouts.
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Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport is the busiest in the world, and the city's rideshare density — Midtown, Buckhead, and Beltline corridors — means Uber and Lyft accidents are among the most common MVA claims in Fulton County.
Why This Matters — And What Insurers Won't Tell You
Rideshare accident claims in Atlanta involve multiple parties: the TNC company, the driver's personal insurer, and potentially the TNC's $1M commercial carrier. Adjusters from each party often dispute which coverage applies, leaving victims in a coverage gap. Determining which phase the driver was in at the moment of the crash — and documenting it with the app's GPS logs — is the first thing an experienced Atlanta rideshare attorney does.
Uber and Lyft maintain $1,000,000 in commercial liability coverage when a passenger is in the vehicle or the driver is en route to a pickup in Georgia.
Atlanta's high rideshare density around Hartsfield-Jackson, Midtown, and Buckhead makes TNC accidents a growing share of Fulton County MVA claims.
Source: O.C.G.A. § 33-1-24 (As of 2025 Session)
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Check My Eligibility →What To Do Next
- 1
Screenshot the Uber or Lyft app immediately showing the trip status, driver name, vehicle, and time — this is critical evidence of which insurance phase applies.
- 2
Request a copy of the trip receipt via email — it timestamps the ride and confirms you were an active passenger.
- 3
Call 911 and get a crash report. Purchase a copy at georgiabuycrash.com ($5).
- 4
Do not speak with any rideshare insurance adjuster before consulting an attorney — TNC claim teams are specialists.
- 5
See a doctor the same day. The 2-year clock under O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 starts at the accident date.

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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 |
|---|---|---|
| TNC commercial liability — passenger in vehicle | $1,000,000 | O.C.G.A. § 33-1-24 |
| TNC contingent coverage — app on, no passenger | $50,000/$100,000 BI + $25,000 PD | O.C.G.A. § 33-1-24 |
| Georgia SOL — personal injury | 2 years | O.C.G.A. § 9-3-33 |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- 1
Not screenshotting the app immediately
GPS trip data is your proof of coverage phase.
- 2
Assuming the rideshare company's insurer is on your side
they are not.
- 3
Settling the property damage claim before the injury claim is resolved.
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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
Who pays if I'm injured as an Uber passenger in Atlanta?▼
If the driver was en route or you were in the vehicle, Uber's $1,000,000 commercial policy applies under O.C.G.A. § 33-1-24. An attorney identifies which coverage is active and files claims simultaneously against all applicable policies.
What if the Uber driver was at fault but was waiting for a ride request?▼
If the app was on but no ride accepted, TNC contingent coverage applies: $50,000/$100,000 bodily injury and $25,000 property damage. This is often insufficient for serious injuries — your UM/UIM coverage may supplement the shortfall.
Sources & Citations
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