Top 3 Types of Car Accidents

Drivers in Lynnwood and Edmonds share wide arterials, busy mall corridors, and complex intersections. These road features create patterns in the crashes we see most often. Understanding how they happen, what to do next, and what evidence matters can help protect your health and your claim.

Rear-End Collisions

Stop-and-go traffic near signals and mall entrances makes rear-end crashes common. They often occur when a following driver is distracted, following too closely, or driving too fast for rain and spray. After impact, move to a safe spot if you can, call 911 for injuries, photograph vehicle positions and damage, and get contact information for witnesses. Preserve repair estimates, medical visits, and any messages from insurers. Evidence that helps includes close and wide photos of both bumpers, lane markings, brake light status if visible, and statements from drivers who saw the approach and braking.

Intersection and Left-Turn Crashes

Unprotected turns, flashing yellow arrows, and multi-lane through traffic create frequent conflicts at intersections. Many collisions start with a misread gap, blocked sightlines, or a courtesy stop in one lane while the next lane continues. If you are involved, focus on safety first, then document signal faces, turn arrows, lane stripes, debris, and weather or lighting. Note where vehicles came to rest and look for nearby businesses that may have exterior cameras. Key proof points include photos of signal phases, angles of impact, skid marks, and witness accounts from through-lane drivers or pedestrians at the corner.

Multi-Lane Merges and Sideswipes

Wide corridors with several lanes and frequent driveways lead to sideswipes during lane changes or merges. Visibility problems from large vehicles, glare, and water spray can hide a car in the next lane. After a sideswipe, do not stand in live traffic. Exchange information in a safer area and photograph tire scuffs, transfer paint, and lane lines to show where the contact occurred. Dashcam clips, rear quarter-panel damage patterns, and statements from drivers behind you can clarify which vehicle moved and whether a safe gap existed.

What To Do After Any Crash

Check for injuries, get to a safe location, and call 911 when needed. Take photos of vehicles, lanes, signals, and conditions. Collect names and phone numbers for witnesses before they leave. Seek a same-day medical evaluation even if symptoms seem minor. Notify your insurer with factual details and avoid recorded statements until you understand your medical picture and your options.

How Bridge Law Helps

Bridge Law preserves critical evidence early, secures video before it is overwritten, and organizes medical and wage-loss documentation so the claim reflects the full impact of the crash. The team handles insurer communications, evaluates available coverage, and builds a clear path toward resolution for drivers in the Lynnwood and Edmonds area.