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12 Uber and Lyft Car Accident and Safety Statistics and Trends for 2026
Uber and Lyft have changed the way we get around. Booking a ride once required calling a taxi company, but it can now be done in seconds from your smartphone.
In Los Angeles, hundreds of thousands of people climb into rideshare vehicles every single day without giving it a second thought. You open the app, watch the little car icon move toward you, and hop in. But at some point, most riders have had the same thought: What are the chances I get into an accident?
It is a fair concern. Every trip means trusting a stranger behind the wheel, someone who may be navigating unfamiliar roads, pushing through a long shift, or glancing at their phone between rides. As rideshare services continue to grow, understanding the real safety picture is something every rider deserves to know.
To help riders understand the realities of rideshare accidents in Los Angeles, across the state of California, and nationally, we reviewed data from a number of sources (linked at the bottom of this article), including:
- National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reports.1
- Police reports.2
- Academic research studies.
- Reputable news outlets.9,13
Some of the data collected and analyzed is only available from Uber and Lyft transparency reports. However, information released by rideshare companies can be incomplete. For example:
Not Reporting Non-Fatal Accidents
The most recent reports from Uber and Lyft contain information about motor vehicle fatalities, fatal physical assaults, and five categories of sexual assault, but they do not offer information on non-fatal accidents.
Fatal accidents overlap with only about 1.7% of non-fatal accidents in the U.S., potentially leaving out more than 98% of collisions involving drivers on the platforms.
While there aren’t many independent studies into Uber and Lyft car accident statistics, a 2015 presentation by the California Public Utilities Commission indicated rideshare drivers in the state were involved in over 1,100 traffic accidents per month.
Excluding Incidents that Occur While the Driver Is Waiting for a Ride Request
Uber and Lyft don’t include the time drivers spend on the road waiting for the next ride request, which can account for up to 50% of their drive time. In San Francisco, an Uber driver fatally struck a child while logged into the app and waiting for a ride request.
Not Counting All Fatal Accidents
When Uber released its first U.S. Safety Report covering 2017 and 2018, it did not count 22 fatal accidents that were allegedly documented because they could not be found in a federal database of traffic deaths.
Failing to Disclose Information About Sexual Assaults
Uber was fined $59 million in 2021 for failing to disclose information to shareholders about sexual assaults related to the platform. The settlement requires the company to fund safety-related initiatives. Meanwhile, Lyft agreed to a $25 million settlement partly for alleged “misstatements and omissions” regarding drivers assaulting riders.
If you’re in an accident and need legal help, be sure to consult with a Los Angeles car accident attorney.
The following are 12 Uber and Lyft car accident statistics and trends.
1. One-third of rideshare drivers have had a crash on the job5,6,7,8
According to the University of Illinois, 33% of rideshare drivers have been in an accident on the job. The study looked at survey responses from 277 rideshare drivers who self-reported on their history of crashes and their driving behaviors. This is the latest available research on the topic.
The study mentioned that rideshare accidents were more likely if drivers were:
- Older.
- Undertaking 10 or more rideshare trips per day.
- Frequently driving on unfamiliar roads.
- Driving while tired.
- Using a phone while driving.
The research mentioned that, unlike commercial truck drivers who must follow strict federal regulations on driving hours, rest breaks, and vehicle inspections, rideshare drivers face no such requirements.
Classified as independent contractors, Uber and Lyft drivers can work unlimited hours without mandated breaks and are not subject to consistent vehicle inspections. Other research has linked these exact conditions to higher accident rates in driving occupations.
2. At least 361 people died in Uber-related collisions in the U.S. from 2017 to 202215
Uber’s publicly available data records 361 fatalities in collisions involving the platform over a six-year period, from 2017 to 2022. Since report data can be incomplete, this may be considered a minimum.
The following fatalities are grouped by report, which each covered two years. The most recent data was released in 2022:
- 2017-2018: 107 reports
- 2019-2020: 101 reports
- 2021-2022: 153 reports
These numbers indicate Uber-related fatality collisions trended upward even during the pandemic, when far fewer people were using rideshare apps.
This indicates an increase in traffic fatalities involving Uber.
In the most recent report, 56% of fatalities involved at least one risky driving behavior:
- Alcohol-impaired driver: 33%
- Speeding vehicle: 39%
- Wrong-way driving: 13%
However, it’s important to note that in the vast majority of fatalities that Uber attributes to risky driving behaviors, a third-party driver was at fault. In cases of alcohol-impaired driving and wrong-way driving, 100% of fatalities are attributed to a third-party driver. In fatalities involving a speeding vehicle, Uber’s report blames just 7% of these on drivers using the app.
This means 44% of fatalities on the Uber app had other causes.
3. There were 216 recorded deaths in Lyft-related collisions across six years, from 2017 to 20223,6,16
According to reports released by Lyft, there were at least 216 motor vehicle fatalities involving the app from 2017 to 2022:
- 2017: 22 reports
- 2018: 34 reports
- 2019: 49 reports
- 2020: 25 reports
- 2021: 36 reports
- 2022: 50 reports
Reported motor vehicle fatalities involving the app increased somewhat steadily from 2017 to 2019 before falling in 2020 and climbing back up to peak in 2022. This correlates with the significant decrease in use of rideshare apps during the pandemic.
However, as we’ve mentioned, these numbers can be underreported, and rideshare services determine these figures based only on miles driven en route to pick up a rider and miles driven with a rider. They do not include miles driven in between, which can represent up to 50% of the driver’s time on the road.
Because of this, these figures may leave out collisions that occur during up to half of the total drive time.
4. Rideshare services increase total driving fatalities by up to 3%12
A University of Chicago Booth School of Business study by professors John Barrios, Yale Hochberg, and Hanyi Yi found that the arrival of ridesharing is linked to roughly a 3% annual increase in U.S. traffic fatalities, about 987 additional deaths per year, including pedestrians.
The researchers tracked Uber and Lyft’s staggered city rollouts between 2001 and 2016, comparing accident data in the eight quarters before and after ridesharing launched in each city. The findings held steady across weekdays, weeknights, and weekends.
The study identifies several reasons for the increase. Ridesharing puts more cars on already congested roads, fewer than half of rideshare trips actually replace a car trip someone would have otherwise taken, meaning most are adding entirely new vehicle miles.
Uber and Lyft also subsidize drivers to stay on the road between fares, creating a constant stream of cars circling for riders. The effects were most pronounced in larger cities with existing public transit systems, which saw increases in new car registrations after ridesharing launched. Bike and pedestrian fatalities rose at similar rates to overall driving fatalities in those cities.
The researchers estimate the financial cost of these additional deaths at roughly $10 billion annually based on DOT valuations, not counting non-fatal injuries.
The authors stop short of condemning ridesharing outright, acknowledging real benefits like reduced drunk driving and new job opportunities, but conclude that “the annual cost in human lives is nontrivial” and call for more research into the overall cost-benefit tradeoff.
5. In the U.S., there were at least 75 fatal physical assaults involving the Uber app from 2017 to 202215
The number of fatal physical assaults involving the app increased across Uber’s three U.S. safety reports, including an 80% increase between the second and third reports:
- 2017-2018: 19 reports
- 2019-2020: 20 reports
- 2021-2022: 36 reports
In the most recent reporting period, 61% of fatalities were drivers and 39% were riders.
Among driver fatalities, 32% reportedly involved motor vehicle theft.
It’s important to point out that in nearly half of all reported fatal physical assaults involving the app, a third party was accused. However, this indicates that in more than 50% of incidents the accused is either the driver or the rider.
6. At least 33 people have been killed in physical assaults involving the Lyft platform3,16
The number of reported fatal physical assaults involving the Lyft app peaked in 2021 with 10 reported fatalities. However, the most recent available data is from 2022.
- 2017: 3 reports
- 2018: 3 reports
- 2019: 4 reports
- 2020: 7 reports
- 2021: 10 reports
- 2022: 6 reports
Lyft attributes some of these fatalities to increased carjackings involving drivers on the app, which peaked in 2020, and conflicts over masking policies during the pandemic.
7. In the U.S., there were 12,522 reports of sexual assault and misconduct involving Uber from 2017 to 202215,17
Sexual assault is grossly underreported, according to the National Sexual Violence Resource Center, and rideshare data may not show the complete picture. But Uber’s official numbers from 2017 to 2022 report 12,522 incidents of sexual assault and misconduct over a period of six years.
- 2017-2018: 5,981 reports
- 2019-2020: 3,824 reports
- 2021-2022: 2,717 reports
While each report from Uber indicates a decrease in reported sexual assaults, it’s important to consider that use of rideshare services also decreased during the pandemic. The fact that there were fewer drivers and riders on the road may have impacted these numbers.
There have been numerous sexual assault claims against Uber. Drivers were the accused party in 68% of reported sexual assaults, and riders were accused in 31% of cases. In the remaining 1% of reported incidents, a third party was accused.
8. There were at least 201,861 incidents of Lyft-related sexual assault and misconduct from 2017 to 202213,14,17
Lyft includes a broader range of classifications for sexual assault and misconduct in their reports than Uber, which is partly why the number is so much higher. Lyft includes over a dozen additional subcategories, such as flirting and asking personal questions, as well as verbal threats of sexual assault, indecent exposure, and soliciting a sexual act.
Here is the number of reported incidents each year from 2017 to 2022:
- 2017: 4,135 reports (narrower range of classifications than in later reports)
- 2018: 35,918 reports
- 2019: 54,458 reports
- 2020: 29,905 reports
- 2021: 30,445 reports
- 2022: 47,000 reports
As we’ve mentioned, sexual misconduct is chronically underreported, and in the past Lyft paid a $25 million settlement partly for allegedly failing to report all data regarding drivers assaulting riders. So, these figures should be considered a minimum.
9. There were 1,297 reports of rape involving Uber rides in the U.S. from 2017 to 20229,12
The following are the numbers of reported non-consensual penetration, or rape, linked to Uber drivers and riders over consecutive reporting periods:
- 2017-2018: 464 reports
- 2019-2020: 388 reports
- 2021-2022: 355 reports
The driver was accused in 90% of reported cases of rape related to the Uber platform. The rider was accused in 7% of cases, and in 3% of cases a third party was accused.
The following are the four other categories considered to be among the five most serious categories of sexual assault, with the total number of reported incidents over the six-year period:
- Attempted non-consensual penetration: 1,156 reports
- Non-consensual kissing of a sexual body part: 1,552 reports
- Non-consensual touching of a sexual body part: 6,455 reports
- Non-consensual kissing of a non-sexual body part: 2,152 reports
While the driver was the most frequently accused individual across the five most serious categories, riders were most frequently accused of non-consensual kissing of a non-sexual body part, representing 51% of incidents.
The number of reported incidents of sexual assault across the five categories generally decreased with each official report from Uber, but factoring in reduced use of the platform during the pandemic, significant underreporting of sexual assault, and the fact that official data from rideshare services can be incomplete, indicates these figures may be considered a minimum.
10. There were at least 725 reported rapes involving Lyft from 2017 to 202214
Reported non-consensual sexual penetration, or rape, on the Lyft platform increased overall between 2017 and the most recent data from 2022. Reports spiked in 2019 and fell in 2020, correlating with reduced rideshare use during the pandemic.
Here is the year-by-year breakdown of reported rape involving the platform.
- 2017: 93 reports
- 2018: 111 reports
- 2019: 156 reports
- 2020: 106 reports
- 2021: 124 reports
- 2022: 135 reports
For the other four categories considered to be the most serious forms of sexual assault, here are the six-year totals:
- Attempted non-consensual sexual penetration: 576 reports
- Non-consensual kissing of a sexual body part: 804 reports
- Non-consensual touching of a sexual body part: 3,782 reports
- Non-consensual kissing of a non-sexual body part: 937 reports
As with other official figures, these may be considered a minimum.
11. Ride-sharing apps cut alcohol-related traffic deaths by 6%4
One of the most compelling, and least reported, findings in rideshare safety research is not about the accidents that happen, but the ones that don’t.
An older study (but the most recent on this subject) from UC Berkeley’s Haas School of Business found that Uber’s availability reduced alcohol-related traffic deaths in the U.S. by more than 6%, preventing an estimated 494 drunk driving fatalities in 2019 alone.
This makes sense. When a safe, cheap, immediately available alternative to driving drunk exists in someone’s pocket, a meaningful number of people use it.
Researchers estimated the annual life-saving value of that effect at between $2.3 and $5.4 billion. For context, that’s roughly one life saved for every 3.6 million Uber trips completed, a statistic the company itself has been surprisingly quiet about promoting.
The finding adds a significant wrinkle to the broader debate about rideshare safety. Even if Uber and Lyft are adding congestion and vehicle miles that increase overall crash risk, they may be simultaneously eliminating some of the most catastrophic crashes on American roads, the ones where someone decided to drive home from the bar anyway.
12. Most rideshare accident settlements range between $20,000 to $250,000, depending on the severity of the accident11
While headline-grabbing verdicts like a $25 million wrongful death judgment against Uber or a $12 million traumatic brain injury settlement against Lyft capture public attention, the reality for most rideshare accident victims is more modest.
The majority of rideshare accident settlements fall between $20,000 and $250,000, with the final amount driven largely by the severity of injuries sustained.
Minor injuries, such as whiplash, soft tissue damage, or minor lacerations, typically settle in the $10,000 to $50,000 range. Moderate injuries, including fractures, concussions, and herniated discs, generally yield settlements between $50,000 and $250,000.
A Lyft rider in Fresno, for example, received $1.35 million after sustaining a herniated disc in a rear-end collision, while an Uber rider who developed Complex Regional Pain Syndrome settled for $285,000.
Severe and catastrophic injuries, spinal cord damage, traumatic brain injuries, paralysis, or death can push settlements well into the millions.
It’s worth noting that every case is unique, and settlement value depends on a wide range of factors beyond injury severity, including available insurance coverage, degree of fault, and the strength of the evidence. Consulting a personal injury attorney is the most reliable way to assess the potential value of a specific claim.
Injured in a Rideshare Accident? Here’s What to Do Next.
These Uber and Lyft car accident statistics and trends tell an important story, but behind every number is a real person dealing with real consequences: medical bills, missed work, chronic pain, and an insurance process designed to minimize what you’re owed.
Whether you were a passenger, a pedestrian, a cyclist, or another driver, being involved in a rideshare accident puts you up against some of the most sophisticated legal and insurance structures in the personal injury world. Uber and Lyft carry substantial insurance policies, but accessing that coverage and getting the full amount you deserve is rarely straightforward.
At Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers, we have spent decades helping injured Californians navigate exactly these situations.
We understand the four-period rideshare insurance system, we know how these companies defend claims, and we know what it takes to build a case that gets results. Our clients have recovered compensation for everything from soft tissue injuries to catastrophic spinal cord damage and wrongful death.
If you or someone you love was hurt in a rideshare accident in Los Angeles or anywhere in California, the most important step you can take right now is to speak with an attorney before you speak with an insurance company. Consultations are free, and you pay nothing unless we win.
Contact Steven M. Sweat, Personal Injury Lawyers today for a free case evaluation.
Sources
- https://www.nhtsa.gov/
- https://oag.ca.gov/consumers/general/pra
- https://d1io3yog0oux5.cloudfront.net/_2027c2069873875dd570b95b37295382/lyft/db/3803/35218/pdf/Community_Safety_Report.pdf
- https://www.nber.org/system/files/working_papers/w29071/w29071.pdf
- https://techcrunch.com/2019/12/05/ubers-fatal-accident-tally-shows-low-rates-but-excludes-key-numbers/
- https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9431654/
- https://www.sfpublicpress.org/safety-report-from-uber-leaves-out-most-accidents/
- https://www.rospa.com/siteassets/pages/health-and-safety/health-and-safety-news/driver-fatigue-and-road-collisions/driver-fatigue-factsheet-0324.pdf
- https://edition.cnn.com/2022/06/30/tech/uber-safety-report
- https://www.victimslawyer.com/blog/top-uber-lyft-accident-settlement-amounts-in-california-a-comprehensive-2026-guide/
- https://bfi.uchicago.edu/wp-content/uploads/BFI_RB_Barrios_The-Cost-of-Convenience_Ridesharing-and-Traffic-Fatalities.pdf
- https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/uber-reports-141-rapes-2020-even-sexual-assault-incidents-declined-pan-rcna36287
- https://edition.cnn.com/2022/06/16/tech/lyft-proposed-settlement-safety/index.html
- https://www.lyft.com/blog/posts/lyft-reports-additional-safety-data
- https://www.uber.com/us/en/about/reports/us-safety-report/
- https://assets.ctfassets.net/vz6nkkbc6q75/3yrO0aP4mPfTTvyaUZHJfJ/f77d145864edc540aa9f7fe530c6bcec/Safety_Transparency_Report_2020-2022.pdf
- https://www.nsvrc.org/statistics/
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about California personal injury law and is not legal advice. Outcomes vary by case. Settlement ranges are illustrative composites drawn from California practice and not promises of any specific result. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Consult a licensed California attorney for advice regarding your specific situation.












