Scottsdale’s Bike-Infrastructure Paradox
Scottsdale has more dedicated bicycle infrastructure than most Phoenix metro cities: the Indian Bend Wash path, dedicated bike lanes on Hayden Road and Scottsdale Road, and recreational routes through the McDowell Sonoran Preserve. Yet bicycle crashes still happen, and they happen primarily at the at-grade road crossings where the bike path or bike lane meets vehicle traffic. The case is structured around Arizona’s bicycle-as-vehicle statute (ARS 28-812) and the three-foot passing law (ARS 28-735).
The Arizona Bicycle Statutes
ARS 28-812 — Bicycles Are Vehicles
A person riding a bicycle on a roadway or shoulder has the same rights and is subject to the same duties as the driver of a vehicle. Drivers cannot treat cyclists as pedestrians.
ARS 28-735 — Three Foot Passing Law
Drivers passing a bicycle in the same direction shall maintain at least three feet of clearance until safely past. Violations are direct evidence of negligence.
ARS 28-815 — Riding “as close as practicable” to the right edge
Cyclists riding slower than normal traffic shall ride as close as practicable to the right curb or edge. “As close as practicable” — not in the gutter, not hugging parked car doors.
Scottsdale Bicycle Crash Hot Spots
Indian Bend Wash path road crossings
The path itself is generally safe. The at-grade road crossings — particularly at Indian Bend, Camelback, Chaparral, and McDonald — are where most crashes happen. Drivers fail to yield to cyclists exiting the path.
Hayden Road dedicated bike lane
Right-hook collisions where drivers turn right across the bike lane without checking.
Scottsdale Road / Old Town corridor
Door collisions (“dooring”), heavy pedestrian-cyclist-vehicle interaction in entertainment district.
McDowell Sonoran Preserve and Pinnacle Peak Road
Recreational riding terrain. Driver-versus-cyclist crashes on weekend mornings.
Cactus Road, Bell Road arterials
Major north-south and east-west arterials with bicycle traffic and right-hook patterns.
The most common Scottsdale bicycle-versus-car crash
Motor vehicle traveling same direction as bicycle turns right across the cyclist’s path, often without signaling. Under ARS 28-754 (turn signals) and general duty of care, the driver was negligent.
Common Causes of Scottsdale Bicycle Crashes
- Right-hook turns (driver turns right across cyclist)
- Left-cross collisions (driver turns left across oncoming cyclist)
- Door collisions
- Pass-too-close violations of ARS 28-735
- Failure to yield at Indian Bend Wash crossings
- Rear-end collisions
- Driver impairment
Damages You Can Recover
- Past and future medical expenses (TBI, spinal, complex orthopedic common)
- Lost income and earning capacity
- Pain and suffering
- Disfigurement and scarring
- Permanent impairment
- Property damage (bicycle and gear)
- Loss of consortium
- Punitive damages where applicable
The First Seven Days After a Scottsdale Bicycle Crash
- Get full medical evaluation including head imaging.
- Preserve bicycle, helmet, and gear as evidence.
- Photograph the scene and your injuries.
- Get the crash report from Scottsdale Police.
- Do not give a recorded statement.
- Identify witnesses.
- Contact a Scottsdale bicycle accident attorney within 7-14 days.
Why Wood Injury Law
- No fees unless we recover.
- Free initial consultation.
- Direct attorney attention.
- ARS 28-812 / 28-735 statute expertise.
- Maricopa County Superior Court familiar.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to file?
I was not wearing a helmet. Can I recover?
The driver said I came out of nowhere.
I was in the bike lane and got hit.
The driver opened their door into me.
What if I was riding at night without lights?
The driver hit me and drove off.
What does it cost?
Hit on a Bicycle in Scottsdale?
The driver and their insurer are framing you as if you didn’t belong on the road. ARS 28-812 says otherwise. Free consultation, no fee unless we recover.
Crash data: Scottsdale, 2024
The following crash statistics are reported by the state for Scottsdale in 2024. They set the backdrop for any personal injury claim in this jurisdiction.
| Total reportable crashes | 4,219 |
| Injury crashes | 1,421 |
| Fatal crashes | 15 |
| People killed | 15 |
| People injured | 2,113 |
| Alcohol-related crashes | 226 |
Source: Arizona Department of Transportation, 2024 Motor Vehicle Crash Facts (azdot.gov)