NEW YORK — We've all seen reports about head injuries, traffic accidents and even deaths that electric scooter riders have suffered as the popular new mobility option has pushed onto the streets in more than 100 cities worldwide.
Despite the dangers, riders are exposing themselves to liability and are most likely not insured for the damages they may cause.
A rider's personal health insurance — if he or she has it — could help defray the cost of their own medical bills in case of an accident.
But it's another matter entirely when a scooter rider hits and injures a pedestrian, damages someone's property or causes a car accident. The rider may be held responsible, and most insurance policies will not cover those expenses.
"Under the standard insurance policy, there's most likely a pretty significant gap in coverage," said Lucian McMahon, senior research specialist for the Insurance Information Institute. "Even if the odds are low, it doesn't mean that something bad might not happen, and owing people money or compensation for injuries that you caused them can get very, very expensive, perhaps even ruinously so."
The two largest scooter companies in the U.S. — Bird and Lime — generally place the responsibility for accidents on riders by listing in their rental agreements that riders relieve the companies of liability. Customers must agree to those terms to ride.
Bird says riders are fully insured for anything that might happen as a result of a faulty Bird scooter. Lime says its insurance policy offers at least $1 million in liability coverage for each covered claim, but there's no way to know whether a claim is covered until an investigation is done, and each claim is unique.
Despite the scooter companies' liability insurance, experts say responsibility for damages is likely to fall on the riders' shoulders, because of the terms and conditions users agree to when they download the app.