## Motorcycle accident claims in Oregon
Motorcycle crashes produce more severe injuries than car crashes — riders have no surrounding metal to absorb impact and are usually thrown from the bike. Oregon motorcycle-injury cases get a 2 years statute of limitations.
### Oregon motorcycle rules
- **Helmet law:** Universal
- **Lane-splitting / lane-filtering:** Illegal
## Common causes of motorcycle crashes
- **Left-turn accidents** — cars turning across the rider's path; the most common multi-vehicle motorcycle crash type
- **Lane changes** — drivers don't see motorcycles in blind spots
- **Rear-end collisions** — drivers misjudging stopping distance or following too closely
- **Door-opening crashes** — opening a parked car's door into a passing rider
- **Road hazards** — gravel, potholes, debris, oil spills (often a government-claim case)
- **Drunk / impaired drivers**
- **Distracted drivers** — phone use is a leading factor
- **Bad weather** — visibility and road conditions matter more for riders
- **Single-vehicle crashes** — rider error, mechanical failure
## The bias problem
Riders face a documented bias in jury verdicts and insurance settlements. Many people (including jurors) assume a motorcycle rider is reckless or speeding — even when evidence shows otherwise. Defense attorneys lean into this. Effective rider-side cases overcome the bias by presenting:
- Forensic accident reconstruction
- Black-box / ECM data when available
- Detailed witness testimony
- Visualizations / animations of the crash
- The rider's clean driving record and certifications
## Helmet defenses
In states without universal helmet laws (or where the rider was over the helmet-mandated age), defense attorneys often argue that a non-helmeted rider's head injuries should reduce damages. Most states either:
- **Bar helmet evidence** entirely (rider's choice not to wear is irrelevant)
- **Allow only on damages** — not on liability (used to argue head injuries would have been less severe)
- **Allow comparative fault reduction** based on no helmet (minority position)
## Lane-splitting and lane-filtering
**Lane-splitting** = riding between lanes of moving traffic.
**Lane-filtering** = moving between stopped or slow-moving traffic.
States that allow some form: California (lane-splitting), Arizona, Utah, Montana, and Minnesota (lane-filtering, generally at low speeds in stopped traffic).
Where it's illegal, lane-splitting can be used against you — sometimes as comparative negligence, sometimes as a complete bar in contributory states (AL, MD, NC, VA, DC).
## Damages
Motorcycle injuries skew severe:
- **Traumatic brain injury** — even with helmets
- **Spinal cord injury** — paralysis is common
- **Multiple fractures** — riders are typically thrown
- **Road rash** — significant skin injuries needing reconstruction
- **Amputations** — leg/foot injuries from bike weight
- **Burns** — hot exhaust contact
- **Internal injuries**
- **Death**
Rider damages typically include lifetime medical care, lost income, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, disfigurement, and (in fatal cases) wrongful-death damages to family.
## Insurance issues
- **Stacking** — combining multiple vehicles' coverage to maximize uninsured-motorist (UM) limits
- **Underinsured motorist** — kicking in when at-fault driver's coverage is insufficient
- **Med-pay** — pays your medical bills regardless of fault, up to limits
- **Property damage** — bike is often a total loss
- **Custom equipment** — aftermarket parts, custom paint, often need separate coverage
Don't accept the at-fault driver's insurance company's first offer. Initial settlement offers usually undervalue motorcycle cases significantly.
## Evidence to preserve
- Bike itself (don't repair or scrap until evaluated)
- Helmet and gear (even if not worn)
- Photos of scene, vehicles, debris pattern, skid marks
- Witness names and contacts
- Police report
- Medical records from ALL providers
- Photos of injuries over time (scarring, bruising progression)
- Surveillance / dashcam footage
- Cell records of involved drivers (subpoena later)
## What you should do
If you've been hurt on a motorcycle in Oregon: get medical care immediately, document everything, do NOT post about the crash on social media, and contact a motorcycle-accident attorney before talking to insurance. Most Oregon motorcycle attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency. Many specialize specifically in rider cases — that experience matters when fighting bias.
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*This guide is general information about Oregon law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Motorcycle-injury law has fact-sensitive issues (helmet defenses, lane-splitting, gear). Talk to a licensed Oregon attorney about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.