MVA Leads · Case Type
Rideshare Accident Leads With the Coverage Tier Screened In
Uber and Lyft collision claimants — passengers, drivers, and third parties — classified by role and app-status period at intake, so your team knows which policy tier responds before the first call.
50
States covered
100%
Exclusive to your firm
24/7
Bilingual screening
TCPA
Consent on every lead
What a Qualified Rideshare Accident Lead Includes
MVA screening plus the rideshare-specific facts that determine coverage.
Claimant Role Classified
Rideshare passenger, rideshare driver, occupant of the other vehicle, or pedestrian — each role carries a different claim posture, and screening classifies it up front.
App-Status Period Captured
Coverage in rideshare cases turns on the app period — offline, available, en route, or on trip. Screeners establish the period at intake because it determines which policy tier responds.
Injury and Treatment Confirmed
Physical injury and treatment status are documented on every claimant, with hospitalization and ongoing-care flags for case-value triage.
Platform and Trip Details
Uber or Lyft, trip receipts, in-app incident reports, and driver information are collected where the claimant has them — evidence that anchors the coverage demand.
No Prior Representation
Every claimant confirms they haven't signed with another firm on the same incident; duplicates are removed across campaigns before billing.
TCPA Compliant Sourcing
One-to-one consent documentation on every lead, captured at the form or call that produced it.
Accidents on this page — assault claims on the tort docket
Rideshare collision claims are an MVA case type, handled here. Claims involving assaults in rideshares are a separate mass tort with different screening — see the rideshare assault litigation campaign if your firm handles that docket.
Round out MVA coverage with car accident leads, truck accident leads, and motorcycle accident leads, or browse MVA leads by state.
Rideshare accident leads FAQs
- What are rideshare accident leads?
- Rideshare accident leads are injured claimants from collisions involving Uber or Lyft vehicles — passengers in the rideshare, rideshare drivers themselves, occupants of other vehicles, and pedestrians. They're screened like other MVA leads for injury and liability, plus the rideshare-specific facts: platform, claimant role, and the app-status period that determines which coverage tier applies.
- Why does the app-status period matter so much?
- Because rideshare insurance is tiered by what the driver was doing in the app. A driver offline is on personal coverage; available-but-unmatched triggers contingent coverage; en-route and on-trip periods trigger the platforms' larger commercial policies. The same collision can have a very different recovery ceiling depending on the period, so we establish it at screening rather than leaving it to your intake team to reconstruct.
- Are these the same as rideshare assault claims?
- No — this page covers rideshare accident (collision) leads, a motor vehicle accident case type. Claims involving assaults by rideshare drivers are a separate, actively litigated mass tort with its own screening criteria — see our rideshare assault litigation campaign page for that docket.
- Are rideshare accident leads exclusive?
- Yes. Every rideshare accident lead is delivered to one firm only, with the screening record — claimant role, app period, platform details — and TCPA consent token attached.
- How are rideshare accident leads delivered?
- Live transfer to your intake line, qualified form leads in real time, or data leads for firms running their own outreach — integrated with Litify, Filevine, MyCase, Lead Docket, and Lawmatics, across all 50 states.
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