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Bicycle Accident Settlement Calculator

Estimate your bicycle accident injury settlement with state-specific fault rules, helmet law impact, and insurance limits

Last reviewed: April 2026

$209 billion in real payouts analyzed · See what we found
Step 1 of 3

Your Injury

$

Your Estimated Settlement

$39,000 — $69,000

Pain & Suffering
$45,000
Medical Bills
$15,000
Lost Wages
$5,000
Property Damage
$3,000
Out-of-Pocket
$1,000

Total (mid-range)$54,000
Estimate based on the industry-standard multiplier method used by insurance adjusters and personal injury attorneys nationwide
Real Data

Car Accident Settlement Data

Based on 51,932 real payments totaling $2B from federal and municipal traffic accident claims.

Average

$39K

Median

$5K

25th %ile

$3K

90th %ile

$35K

Payment DistributionYour estimate: 92nd percentile
$2K$5K$98K

Source: U.S. Treasury, NYC Comptroller, Chicago City Data. Actual payouts may vary based on individual circumstances.

How Your Estimate Compares to Insurance Claims Data

Based on bodily injury liability claims reported to the NAIC across 50 states (2020–2022):

Your State Avg

$31K

National Avg

$29K

3-Year Change

+19.4%

Your estimate is in a similar range to the average BI claim in your state, which is common for moderate injury cases.

Source: NAIC 2022/2023 Auto Insurance Database Report, adopted December 2025.

Get Your Personalized Settlement Report

Add your details and we'll email you a state-specific report — including comparable verdicts and what attorneys typically settle for in your area.

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Editorially Reviewed — Content reviewed for accuracy using published legal research, government data, and verified court records. See our methodology

Reviewed by Leonard Goldberg, Editor · Last updated May 15, 2026

How Bicycle Accident Settlements Are Calculated

Bicycle accidents are calculated using the same multiplier method as car accidents, but with two important differences. First, cyclists are far more vulnerable than car occupants — the same impact causes much more severe injuries, which supports higher multipliers (3-5×). Second, fault analysis is more complicated because many states don't have clear traffic rules for cyclists, and 'anti-cyclist bias' is well-documented among adjusters and juries.

According to NHTSA, 938 cyclists died in US traffic crashes in 2022 — the highest number in 45 years. The CDC reports approximately 130,000 cycling injuries require emergency room care annually. Yet bicycle-specific insurance coverage is rare — most claims rely on the at-fault driver's auto liability policy or the cyclist's own homeowner's or UM/UIM coverage.

Our calculator factors in your state's fault system (comparative vs contributory), helmet law (30 states have no helmet law for adults; few reduce recovery based on helmet use), and typical insurance policy limits. See our 50-state settlement map for regional data.

Average Bicycle Accident Settlement by Injury

Injury TypeTypical RangeNotes
Road rash / minor abrasions$3,000 – $15,000Scrapes, contusions, brief treatment
Broken collarbone / wrist$15,000 – $75,000Common cycling injuries, 8-12 week recovery
Concussion / mild TBI$25,000 – $150,000Post-concussion syndrome increases value
Severe fracture / surgery$50,000 – $300,000Leg, hip, spine fractures with ORIF
Severe TBI / spinal injury$250,000 – $2,000,000+Permanent impairment, high multipliers
Wrongful death$500,000 – $5,000,000+Age and earnings drive value

Factors That Affect Your Settlement

  • Fault System: Pure comparative states (13) reduce damages by fault percentage. Modified comparative (33 states) bar recovery at 50% or 51% fault. Contributory (5 jurisdictions: AL, MD, NC, VA, DC) bar recovery at ANY fault — devastating for cyclists, because insurers routinely claim the cyclist was partially at fault (not using bike lane, riding wrong way, no helmet at night).
  • Helmet Use: Only about 22 states have helmet laws for cyclists — most apply only to minors. Only 3 states (California for minors, Oregon for minors, New York for minors) have statewide helmet laws. Non-use rarely bars recovery but insurers argue it increases head injury severity. Helmets reduce head injury risk by 60% (CDC meta-analysis) — a strong argument on both sides.
  • Right-of-Way and Traffic Law Compliance: Cyclists are generally subject to the same traffic laws as drivers (vehicular cycling principle) but also have special rights (e.g., using shoulders, bike lanes). Wrong-way riding, running red lights, and riding without lights at night hurt cases significantly. Adjusters weaponize these violations aggressively.
  • E-Bike Classification: Many states now classify e-bikes in 3 tiers. Class 1 (pedal-assist, 20 mph max) — treated as bicycles. Class 2 (throttle, 20 mph max) — same. Class 3 (pedal-assist, 28 mph max) — may require license/insurance in some states. Class 3 e-bikes can be treated as motor vehicles in some jurisdictions, changing insurance and liability analysis.
  • Driver's Insurance Limits: Unless the cyclist has UM/UIM coverage on their auto policy (or renters/homeowner policy extends to cycling), recovery is limited to the at-fault driver's policy. Most state minimums are $25K/$50K — often too low for serious cycling injuries. Check UM/UIM coverage immediately after an accident.

Why Cycling Injuries Are So Severe

Understanding the physics and policy of cycling injuries explains why settlements run higher than comparable car-occupant claims.

  • 938 cyclist fatalities in 2022 (NHTSA) — the highest single-year total in 45 years and up 6% from 2021.
  • About 130,000 ER visits annually for cycling injuries (CDC) — not counting unreported injuries and minor self-treated crashes.
  • Cyclists are 2.5× more likely than car occupants to be injured per million trips; 6× more likely per mile traveled.
  • Head injuries account for 60% of cyclist deaths but only 22% of cyclist ER visits — helmets shift the fatality math dramatically.
  • 75% of cycling fatalities occur in urban areas. Intersections are the single most common crash location (45% of fatal bicycle-motor vehicle crashes).
  • Peak hours: 6-9 PM (evening rush + low light). Peak season: August-October (good weather + commuting + tourism).

Bicycle Helmet Laws by State

Helmet laws vary enormously. Most states have no adult helmet law. Some require helmets only for minors. A few apply to all cyclists.

Minor-Only Helmet Laws (23 states)

Statewide mandatory for specific age: Alabama (under 16), Arizona (none), California (under 18), Connecticut (under 16), Delaware (under 16), DC (under 16), Florida (under 16), Georgia (under 16), Hawaii (under 16), Louisiana (under 12), Maine (under 16), Maryland (under 16), Massachusetts (under 17), New Hampshire (under 16), New Jersey (under 17), New Mexico (under 18), New York (under 14), North Carolina (under 16), Oregon (under 16), Pennsylvania (under 12), Rhode Island (under 16), Tennessee (under 16), West Virginia (under 15).

No State Helmet Law (28 states)

No statewide helmet law at any age (some cities have local ordinances): Alaska, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming.

Local City Ordinances

City ordinances can impose requirements even when state law doesn't (Seattle, Dallas/Fort Worth, some California cities have local helmet requirements). Always check local ordinances — violations may affect liability.

The Helmet-Use Defense

Helmet defense: Even in states without helmet laws, insurers argue non-use 'contributed to' head injury severity. Studies vary — helmets reduce serious head injury risk 50-65% (Cochrane 2013) but 'would you have avoided head injury altogether?' is harder to prove. Well-counseled plaintiffs usually limit helmet-use reduction to 10-20% of head injury damages.

Right-of-Way and Bicycle Traffic Rules

Most states follow the 'vehicular cycling' principle — bicycles are vehicles subject to traffic laws. Deviations from this principle create liability confusion.

Basics

Basics (most states): Ride with traffic (not against). Use the right side of the road. Use bike lanes where available. Obey traffic signals and stop signs (Idaho Stop exception: 8 states allow treating stop signs as yields for cyclists).

Hand Signals

Hand signals for turns and stops are legally required in most states. Studies show cyclists signal only 25-40% of the time, which hurts cases when a collision occurs during an unsignaled maneuver.

Dooring

Dooring (parked car door opens in front of cyclist): Almost always the motorist's fault. Most states have specific 'dooring' statutes (California Vehicle Code §22517). Dooring settlements often range $10K-$200K for typical injuries.

Crosswalks

Crosswalk cycling: Some states prohibit cyclists from riding across crosswalks (must dismount). Others allow it with pedestrian right-of-way. The rule affects liability dramatically at intersections.

Sharrows

'Sharrows' (shared lane markings on roads without bike lanes) indicate cyclists can take the full lane. They don't grant legal priority but demonstrate that bicycle traffic is expected and lawful.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much is the average bicycle accident settlement?

Average bicycle accident settlements range widely by severity. Minor injuries (road rash, bruising): $5K-$25K. Broken bones with typical recovery: $25K-$100K. Severe injuries (head trauma, spinal): $250K-$1M+. Wrongful death cases routinely exceed $1M. NHTSA data shows 938 cyclist fatalities in 2022, with settlement values rising consistently due to higher medical costs and improved fatality documentation.

What if I wasn't wearing a helmet when hit?

It depends on your state. In states without mandatory helmet laws for adults (28 states), not wearing one typically doesn't affect liability but may reduce damages for head injuries (contributory to injury severity). Our helmet-use defense rarely reduces awards by more than 15-20%. In states with helmet laws applying to the victim's age group, non-use can affect recovery more significantly — the insurer will argue 'comparative fault'.

Am I covered if a car hits me on my bike?

Yes, primarily through the at-fault driver's auto liability policy. Additionally, (1) your own UM/UIM auto coverage covers you even on a bike, (2) MedPay/PIP on your auto policy covers medical bills, (3) homeowner/renter insurance may extend liability coverage. Check all policies immediately after an accident — most people underestimate how much coverage applies.

Can I sue a driver who had right-of-way?

Yes, sometimes. Right-of-way isn't absolute — drivers still have duty of reasonable care. A driver with green light who speeds through a crosswalk where a cyclist is crossing can still be partially liable. 'I didn't see the bike' is not a valid legal defense. Drivers must look for all road users, not just other cars. Partial fault may reduce but not eliminate recovery in comparative states.

What if I was riding against traffic (wrong way)?

Wrong-way riding is explicitly illegal in most states. Insurance adjusters heavily weaponize this — expect 30-70% comparative fault reduction. In contributory states (AL, MD, NC, VA, DC), wrong-way riding often bars recovery entirely. However, many cases still settle because drivers also violated duties (speeding, distracted driving, not checking). Strong documentation of driver fault is critical.

Are e-bikes treated the same as bicycles?

Class 1 and 2 e-bikes (20 mph top speed) are generally treated like bicycles in most states. Class 3 e-bikes (28 mph top speed) vary. Some states (California, Oregon, Washington) require helmets for Class 3 and may require registration/license. A few states treat e-bikes over a certain power as motor vehicles, requiring insurance and licensing. Your state's specific e-bike law matters.

Does my homeowner's insurance cover my cycling injury?

Sometimes, in limited ways. Personal liability on homeowner's policies covers YOUR liability if you cause cycling injury to someone else. It rarely covers YOUR injuries. MedPay on a homeowner policy is minimal ($1K-$5K). For your own injuries, look to the at-fault driver's policy, your auto UM/UIM, your health insurance, and in limited cases, specialized cycling insurance (USA Cycling, American Cycling Association policies).

How long do I have to file a bicycle accident claim?

Most states: 2-3 years from the date of accident for personal injury. California: 2 years (CCP §335.1). Texas: 2 years (CPRC §16.003). Florida: 4 years (F.S. §95.11(3)). New York: 3 years (CPLR §214). Government claims (city-maintained roads, dangerous intersections): 30-180 day notice requirements. Wrongful death: typically 2 years from date of death.

What if I was hit by a hit-and-run driver?

Report to police within 24 hours (required for uninsured motorist claims in most states). File with your own auto insurer under UM/UIM coverage. Some states have uninsured motorist funds (NY's MVAIC) that cover hit-and-run victims without UM coverage. Some cities have victim compensation funds. Immediate police report + medical care documentation is critical for recovery.

Are 'share the road' signs legally meaningful?

They're educational, not legally binding. But case law in several jurisdictions has cited them as evidence of the cycling duty of care motorists owe. Bike lane stripes have more legal weight — crossing a bike lane without checking is negligence per se in many states. The presence of bike infrastructure can strengthen negligence arguments against drivers.

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