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Underinsured Motorist Coverage for Bicycle Accidents
Getting hit by a car while riding your bike is already a traumatic experience. Finding out the driver who hit you barely has enough insurance to cover your emergency room visit makes it worse. This is where underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage becomes one of the most important protections a Chicago cyclist can have, and understanding how it works could be the difference between a fair recovery and paying out of pocket for injuries that were never your fault.
Table of Contents
- What Is Underinsured Motorist Coverage and How Does It Apply to Cyclists?
- Why Chicago Cyclists Face a Serious Underinsurance Problem
- How UIM Claims Work After a Chicago Bicycle Accident
- Whose Policy Covers You as a Cyclist in Chicago?
- Steps to Protect Your UIM Claim After a Bicycle Accident in Chicago
- FAQs About Underinsured Motorist Coverage for Bicycle Accidents in Chicago
What Is Underinsured Motorist Coverage and How Does It Apply to Cyclists?
Underinsured motorist coverage is a type of auto insurance protection that pays the gap between what an at-fault driver’s policy covers and the actual cost of your injuries. It pays the difference between your UIM limits and the liability limits of the at-fault driver, if lower than your UIM limits. For cyclists, this matters enormously. A driver who hits you on N. Milwaukee Avenue near Wicker Park or clips you on N. Clark Street in Lincoln Park may only carry the state’s minimum coverage, which is nowhere near enough to cover serious bicycle accident injuries.
Illinois law under 625 ILCS 5/7-203 requires bodily injury limits of at least $25,000 per person per accident and $50,000 total per accident. That sounds like a lot until you consider a traumatic brain injury, a spinal cord injury, or multiple broken bones that require surgery, rehabilitation, and months away from work. Medical bills in those cases can easily exceed $100,000 or more. The driver’s $25,000 policy limit evaporates fast.
Under 215 ILCS 5/143a-2, UIM coverage protects you when the at-fault motorist’s insurance is insufficient to cover your damages. It supplements the difference between the at-fault driver’s insurance limits and the actual damages incurred, up to your own UIM policy limits. What most cyclists do not realize is that this coverage applies to them even when they are on a bicycle, not behind a wheel. If you or a household family member owns an auto insurance policy with UIM coverage, that protection can extend to you as a cyclist injured by an underinsured driver.
Illinois law under 215 ILCS 5/143a-2 requires UIM coverage when you purchase higher limits of uninsured motorist bodily injury coverage. This means the more robust your UM coverage, the more likely you are to have meaningful UIM protection available when you need it most. Speaking with a Chicago bike accident lawyer about your current policy limits before an accident happens is a smart move every Chicago cyclist should consider.
Why Chicago Cyclists Face a Serious Underinsurance Problem
Chicago’s streets have become measurably more dangerous for cyclists with every passing year. A comprehensive analysis of City of Chicago crash records from 2022 through 2025 reveals 8,389 reported bike crashes, 6,248 injuries, and 11 fatalities, with the total crash count climbing every single year from 1,686 in 2022 to 2,465 in 2025, a 46.2% surge. More crashes mean more injured cyclists, and more injured cyclists means more people discovering, too late, that the driver who hit them does not have enough coverage.
The underinsurance problem is compounded by the types of crashes happening most often. Failing to yield right-of-way is the top identified cause of Chicago bike crashes, responsible for 2,165 crashes, representing 25.81% of all incidents, and linked to 1,777 injuries over the four-year study period. Drivers who fail to yield, run red lights, or make improper turns are often the same drivers carrying minimum policy limits. When a driver with $25,000 in bodily injury coverage causes a crash that leaves you with a fractured skull or a herniated disc, that gap between what they owe and what they can pay is real and immediate.
Chicago’s most dangerous corridors for cyclists make this problem concrete. N. Milwaukee Avenue is the single most dangerous corridor for cyclists in Chicago, recording 329 crashes, 253 injuries, and 1 fatality over the four-year study period, averaging more than 82 crashes per year. N. Clark Street recorded 274 crashes, and N. Damen Avenue recorded 175 crashes and 1 fatality. Cyclists riding through Bucktown, Logan Square, Pilsen, or commuting along the Halsted corridor face elevated risk every day. If you are injured on any of these streets and the driver is underinsured, your own UIM policy may be the only source of full compensation available to you. That is why uninsured motorist coverage, underinsured motorist coverage, and other legal remedies deserve serious attention from any injured cyclist, and the insurer’s first settlement offer is almost never the full amount you are entitled to.
How UIM Claims Work After a Chicago Bicycle Accident
Filing a UIM claim after a bicycle accident is not as simple as calling your insurance company and waiting for a check. There is a specific process you must follow, and missing a step can cost you the coverage you paid for. The first requirement is that you must exhaust, or at least partially exhaust, the at-fault driver’s liability policy before your UIM coverage kicks in. A policy that provides underinsured motor vehicle coverage may include a clause that denies payment until the limits of liability under all bodily injury liability insurance policies applicable to the underinsured motor vehicle and its operators have been partially or fully exhausted by payment of judgment or settlement.
This means you generally need to settle with or obtain a judgment against the at-fault driver first. Once you do, your own insurer steps in to cover the remaining damages up to your UIM policy limits. The limits of liability for an insurer providing underinsured motorist coverage are the limits of such coverage, less those amounts actually recovered under the applicable bodily injury insurance policies, bonds, or other security maintained on the underinsured motor vehicle. So if the at-fault driver pays $25,000 and you have $100,000 in UIM coverage, you could potentially recover up to $75,000 more from your own insurer.
There is also a notice requirement you must take seriously. No insurer shall exercise any right of subrogation against an underinsured motorist where the insurer has been provided with written notice in advance of a settlement between its insured and the underinsured motorist and the insurer fails to advance a payment to the insured in an amount equal to the tentative settlement within 30 days following receipt of such notice. In plain terms, you must notify your own insurer before you settle with the at-fault driver. If you settle without giving that notice, you could lose your UIM claim entirely. A bicycle accident lawyer can manage this process and protect your rights at every step. Do not try to handle a UIM claim on your own while recovering from a serious injury.
Whose Policy Covers You as a Cyclist in Chicago?
One of the most common questions injured cyclists ask is whether UIM coverage even applies to them if they were on a bicycle, not in a car. The answer is yes, in most cases. Your own auto insurance policy’s UIM coverage generally extends to you as a pedestrian or cyclist injured by a motor vehicle. You do not need to be in your car at the time of the crash. If you commute by bike along the Lakefront Trail, ride through Hyde Park, or pedal through the West Loop on your way to work, and a driver with inadequate insurance hits you, your own auto policy may be your primary source of recovery.
What if you do not own a car or hold an auto insurance policy? You may still have coverage through a household family member’s policy. Illinois courts have consistently recognized that cyclists can access UM and UIM coverage through household policies even when the injured person is not the named policyholder. If your spouse, parent, or another household member has an auto policy with UIM coverage, that protection may extend to you. This is especially relevant for college students living at home, young adults without their own vehicles, and families where only one member owns a car.
You should also check whether you have coverage through multiple policies. Nothing in Illinois law prohibits an insurer from setting forth policy terms and conditions which provide that if the insured has coverage available under more than one policy or provision of coverage, any recovery or benefits may be equal to, but may not exceed, the higher of the applicable limits of the respective coverage. This anti-stacking rule means you generally cannot double up on coverage from two separate policies, but you can use whichever policy provides the higher limit. Identifying all available policies is a critical early step after any serious bicycle crash. The attorneys at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg can review your coverage picture and identify every potential source of recovery available to you.
Steps to Protect Your UIM Claim After a Bicycle Accident in Chicago
What you do in the hours and days after a bicycle accident in Chicago directly affects your ability to recover UIM benefits. The first priority is always your health. Get medical attention immediately, even if your injuries feel minor. Some injuries, including concussions and internal bleeding, worsen over days and may not be obvious at the scene. A documented medical record created close in time to the crash is one of the most important pieces of evidence in any bicycle accident claim.
At the scene, document everything you can. Take photos of the vehicles, the road conditions, your bicycle, and any visible injuries. Get the driver’s insurance information, license plate number, and contact details. Collect names and phone numbers from any witnesses. If the crash happened near a busy intersection like those on W. Belmont Avenue or N. Broadway, there may be traffic cameras or business surveillance footage that captured the crash. Note the officer’s badge number and get the police report number. That report is often essential when filing a UIM claim.
After the scene, be careful about what you say to insurance adjusters. Your own insurer is not automatically on your side in a UIM dispute. Insurers have a financial interest in limiting what they pay, and anything you say in a recorded statement can be used to reduce or deny your claim. The insurer’s first settlement offer is almost never the full amount you are entitled to, and without legal representation, most injured cyclists accept far less than their claim is worth. Reach out to a Chicago personal injury lawyer before you give any statements or sign any documents. The team at Briskman Briskman & Greenberg has spent decades fighting for injured Chicagoans and can handle all communication with insurers on your behalf.
Keep in mind that time limits apply. The Illinois statute of limitations for personal injury claims is generally two years from the date of the crash under 735 ILCS 5/13-202. Your UIM policy may also contain its own internal deadlines for providing notice and demanding arbitration. Missing either deadline can permanently bar your claim. If you were injured in a bicycle accident involving an underinsured driver, contact Briskman Briskman & Greenberg as soon as possible. You can also learn more about the broader surge in bike accidents in Chicago and what the data means for injured cyclists across the city. If you are outside the city, a bicycle accident lawyer serving the Berwyn area and surrounding suburbs can also help you evaluate your UIM options.
FAQs About Underinsured Motorist Coverage for Bicycle Accidents in Chicago
Does underinsured motorist coverage apply if I was on a bicycle and not in a car?
Yes. UIM coverage under an Illinois auto insurance policy generally extends to the policyholder as a pedestrian or cyclist, not just as a driver or passenger. If you were riding your bike and hit by an underinsured driver, your own auto policy’s UIM coverage can apply to your injuries. You do not need to be inside a vehicle at the time of the crash to access this benefit.
What if I do not own a car or have my own auto insurance policy?
You may still have access to UIM coverage through a household family member’s auto policy. Illinois law and most standard policy language extend coverage to resident household members, even if they are not the named policyholder. If a parent, spouse, or sibling in your household has an auto policy with UIM coverage, that protection may apply to your bicycle accident injuries. An attorney can review the policy language to confirm your eligibility.
How much can I recover through a UIM claim after a Chicago bicycle accident?
The amount depends on the at-fault driver’s liability limits and your own UIM policy limits. Your UIM insurer pays the difference between what the at-fault driver’s policy covers and your actual damages, up to your UIM limits. For example, if the at-fault driver pays $25,000 and you have $100,000 in UIM coverage, you could potentially recover up to $75,000 more from your own insurer, assuming your total damages support that amount.
Do I have to sue the at-fault driver before making a UIM claim?
You generally need to resolve the claim against the at-fault driver first, either through a settlement or a judgment, before your UIM coverage is triggered. Critically, you must notify your own insurer in writing before you finalize any settlement with the at-fault driver. Under Illinois law, if your insurer does not advance payment within 30 days of receiving that notice, it loses certain subrogation rights. Failing to give proper notice can jeopardize your UIM claim, which is why having an attorney manage this process is so important.
What is the deadline for filing a UIM claim after a bicycle accident in Illinois?
Two deadlines apply. The Illinois statute of limitations for personal injury claims is generally two years from the date of the accident under 735 ILCS 5/13-202. Your auto insurance policy may also contain a shorter contractual deadline for providing notice or demanding arbitration on a UIM claim. Illinois courts have upheld these shorter policy deadlines. Missing either deadline can result in losing your right to recover. Contact an attorney as soon as possible after your crash to protect both timelines.
More Resources About Bike Accident Insurance and Compensation
- How Insurance Works After a Chicago Bicycle Accident
- Filing an Insurance Claim After a Bicycle Accident
- Dealing With Insurance Adjusters After a Bicycle Crash
- Using Your Own Auto Insurance After a Bicycle Accident
- Uninsured Motorist Coverage for Bicycle Accidents
- Health Insurance Coverage After a Bicycle Accident
- Medical Payments Coverage in Bicycle Accident Claims
- What Damages Are Available in Chicago Bicycle Accident Cases
- Medical Expenses After a Bicycle Accident
- Future Medical Costs After a Bicycle Accident
- Lost Wages After a Bicycle Accident
- Loss of Earning Capacity After a Bicycle Accident
- Pain and Suffering in Bicycle Accident Cases
- Emotional Distress After a Bicycle Accident
- Permanent Disability in Bicycle Accident Claims
- Compensation for Scarring and Disfigurement
- Compensation for Bicycle Repair or Replacement
- Wrongful Death Damages in Fatal Bicycle Accident Cases
- Bicycle Accident Settlement Values in Chicago
- Factors That Affect Bicycle Accident Settlements
- How Long Bicycle Accident Claims Take to Resolve
- When to File a Bicycle Accident Lawsuit in Illinois
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