Injured in a Coachella Accident? Our Injury Lawyers Can Help
Coachella 2026 is upon us and with the influx of traffic and activity, many concert goers find themselves in Uber or Lyft accidents, or injured or around the festival venue. Don’t let these car and pedestrian crashes ruin your experience—rest assured that our rideshare accident lawyers will take care of you and fight for your right to compensation.
The rideshare system can be tricky and knowing how insurance coverage applies between Uber and Lyft is best handled by a Coachella accident lawyer. We make sure that accident details, video footage, and witness accounts are taken and preserved for your case. Our law firm has successfully won millions against insurance companies that try to lowball concert goers like you and we’ll continue to fight them and get justice.
Common Coachella Accidents and Injuries
Accidents and injuries at Coachella are fairly common. Any time there is a huge gathering of people coming from hundreds or even thousands of miles away, Uber and Lyft drivers become strained and so do the venue and security staff. But just because the event is massive and complex, it doesn’t mean injuries on the premises or on the ride to and from the venue can be excused.
At large concerts like Coachella, common injuries and accidents include:
- Slip and fall accidents
- Cuts and abrasions from structures and vendors
- Surging crowds resulting in crush injuries
- Fractures
- Head injuries and concussions
- Severe allergic reactions from food vendors
- Medical emergencies
- Tinnitus or hearing loss from loud music
- Violence
- Sexual assault
Many accidents from events like Coachella can arise from negligence or aggression. Uber and Lyft drivers can become flustered, confused, or even annoyed with traffic and large crowds blocking pathways. Other festival attendees can become drunk, rowdy, and belligerent. Rideshare drivers and security at these venues need to be attentive or on alert, otherwise they may be liable for any accidents and injuries.
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What to do if You’ve Been Injured During Coachella Weekend
Coachella draws hundreds of thousands of people to the Coachella Valley every April. That kind of volume puts enormous pressure on Uber and Lyft drivers, venue staff, food vendors, and security personnel. When things go wrong—and they do—knowing what steps to take can be the difference between a solid legal claim and a case that falls apart before it gets started.
Get Medical Help and Report the Incident
Go to a medical station or call 911. Do this before anything else. The festival grounds have first aid stations, and Indio emergency services are familiar with Coachella-related incidents. Do not wait until you get back to your rental or hotel. Do not assume the pain will go away.
Adrenaline hides injuries and so does alcohol. A head injury might feel like a headache. A fractured rib might just feel like soreness from the crowd. Concussions, internal bleeding, and spinal injuries have all been missed in the hours following an accident, only to become serious medical emergencies days later. Get evaluated on site.
If you were hurt in an Uber or Lyft, do not let the driver leave before police arrive. Call 911 and ask for law enforcement to respond. California law requires a police report when there are injuries in a vehicle accident. That report gets the driver’s license, insurance information, vehicle registration, and the basics of what happened. It also creates a timestamp. Insurance companies look for gaps and inconsistencies, and a police report closes a lot of those gaps immediately.
Tell the responding officer and medical personnel exactly what hurts and where. Do not minimize anything. These early medical records are the foundation of your injury claim. If the record says you had no complaints at the scene and you show up three days later with a herniated disc, the insurance company will argue the injury happened somewhere else.
For injuries at the venue itself—a slip near a vendor, a fall in a crowded walkway, a crush injury near the stage, or an allergic reaction from festival food—report the incident to Coachella security or venue staff and ask for a written incident report. Get a copy or photograph it before you leave. If staff refuses to give you one, write down the name of every person you spoke to and the time you reported it.
Document the Scene and Protect Your Coachella Accident Claim
Take photos and video immediately. This applies whether you were in a rideshare accident on the way to the venue or got hurt inside the festival grounds.
For Uber and Lyft accidents, photograph the vehicle, the license plate, the damage, and your injuries. Screenshot your ride receipt in the app. The app records your driver’s name, photo, vehicle description, pickup and drop-off locations, and the time of the trip. That information links you to that specific driver at that specific time. Do not close the app or rate the driver. Just screenshot everything and preserve the ride details before they get buried.
For accidents at the venue, photograph the exact spot where it happened. Conditions get fixed fast once a venue knows there’s a problem. By the time your attorney sends a preservation request, the hazard may already be repaired, and management may claim it never existed.
Collect contact information from anyone who saw what happened. Full name and phone number. People scatter after Coachella. They fly home to different states and countries. A witness who saw a rideshare driver blow through a pedestrian crossing or watched you fall because of inadequate crowd control is valuable—but only if your attorney can actually reach them later.
Do not post anything about the incident on social media. Not a photo, not a status update, not a vague comment about having a rough night. Defense attorneys and insurance adjusters pull social media content during litigation. A photo of you at a set two hours after reporting an injury does not mean you weren’t hurt. But it will be used against you.
Do not give a recorded statement to Uber’s insurance carrier, Lyft’s insurance carrier, or the festival’s insurance carrier without an attorney present. Adjusters call quickly after accidents. They are friendly and they sound reasonable. Their job is to get you to say something that limits your payout or eliminates it entirely.
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Call a Coachella Accident Lawyer Before You Settle Anything
Uber and Lyft accidents are not like standard car accident claims. The coverage that applies depends on exactly what the driver was doing when the crash happened. If the driver had the app off, only their personal auto insurance applies—and those policies are often inadequate. If the driver had the app on and was waiting for a request, Uber and Lyft provide limited liability coverage. If the driver was actively on a trip, the companies carry up to $1 million in liability coverage. Insurance companies do not explain this to you. They apply whichever tier costs them the least and hope you accept it.
Festival injury claims have their own complications. Coachella is operated by Goldenvoice, a subsidiary of AEG. These are large organizations with legal teams and insurance policies designed to minimize payouts. Premises liability cases require showing that the venue knew about a dangerous condition—or should have known—and failed to fix it in time. Ticket agreements contain liability language, but those clauses are not always enforceable, particularly when injuries result from negligence or inadequate security.
Crush injuries near stages, heat-related medical emergencies from insufficient shade and water access, violence from other attendees when security fails to intervene, sexual assaults in poorly monitored areas—these are all incidents where venue liability may apply and where an attorney can make a real difference.
California gives you two years from the date of injury to file a personal injury lawsuit. That sounds like a long time. It is not. Evidence disappears. Witnesses become unreachable. Surveillance footage gets overwritten within days unless someone sends a legal hold demanding its preservation. The sooner an attorney gets involved, the more there is to work with.
You came to Coachella for the music. If someone else’s negligence—a distracted rideshare driver, an understaffed venue, a vendor who failed a basic safety check—left you injured, you have options. Call us any time, 24/7.
Call or text (877) 735-7035 or complete a Free Case Evaluation form