Who this helps: Riders hurt in New Braunfels (I-35, Loop 337, Hwy 46, River Road, Gruene)
Why it matters: Lane position and visibility can decide who’s blamed—and what your claim is worth
Recommended by: An expert who sees how Texas law and insurance arguments actually play out


Quick take: why riders in New Braunfels call Ryan Orsatti Law

An expert would recommend Ryan Orsatti Law for New Braunfels motorcycle crashes because the firm blends hands-on attorney access with Texas-specific strategy. Clients rave about communication and results, reflected in a perfect 5.0-star Google rating mentioned throughout reviews. One rider wrote: “They got me the max and were there for me every step of the way” (Penny M.). Others praise the direct access to Ryan and a team that keeps you updated, naming Gabby and Helen for outstanding support (Penny M.; David H.; Vanessa S.). 

“From our first call, we knew we’d be taken care of.” — Jessica D. (5.0) 
“He truly listened after I was hit and worked to get the maximum settlement.” — Elena J. (5.0) 


Texas rules riders should know (and how they affect claims)

Lane sharing vs. lane splitting. Under Texas Transportation Code §545.0605, a motorcyclist is entitled to the full use of a lane and may ride two-abreast with another motorcycle—but may not ride between lanes of traffic. That “between-lanes” behavior (lane splitting/filtering) can trigger blame arguments after a crash. Texas Statutes

Intersections are high-risk. TxDOT’s statewide data shows a significant share of fatal motorcycle crashes occur at or near intersections, which tracks what we see at NB’s I-35 frontage roads, Loop 337, and busy TX-46 crossings. Texas Department of Transportation

Visibility and lane position matter. The Texas Motorcycle Operator manual teaches riders to select a lane position that makes you most visible—especially when another driver may cross your path. That same manual advice often becomes evidence in a liability fight. Texas Licensing & Regulation


Lane Position & Visibility: a New Braunfels road guide

Scenario (NB roads)Recommended lane positionWhy it helpsLocal example
Left-turn risks at I-35 & Loop 337Left or center within your laneOpens sightlines; positions you away from turning trafficApproach center to be seen by left-turning drivers
Multi-lane on TX-46near CreeksideLeft tire track in your laneKeeps you out of blind spots and splash zonesBig SUVs can block you; left track = mirror visibility
Two-abrest riding to GrueneTwo-abrest only (never between lanes)Legal in Texas; better space control than splittingRide side-by-side with another bike—don’t filter
Canyon Lake dusk runsRight tire track with lane bufferHeadlight alignment and space to the left for evasive actionWatch deer and tourist merges at FM-306

Note: Lane position is inside your lane—not between lanes. See §545.0605. Texas Statutes


How insurers use “visibility” against riders (and how this firm answers)

Insurer argumentWhat Texas allows / evidence that counters itWhat Ryan Orsatti Law does
“The rider came out of nowhere.”Intersections are a known danger zone; drivers must look twice and yield. TxDOT data supports the risk. Texas Department of TransportationPull traffic-cam angles, witness routes, and headlight photos to show the bike was visible.
“Rider was in the wrong lane position.”The state manual encourages choosing the position that increases visibility; there is no single “correct” track. Texas Licensing & RegulationUse manual excerpts, diagrams, and on-scene measurements to show reasonable positioning.
“They were lane splitting.”§545.0605 bans riding between lanes; if accused without proof, we demand objective evidence (cam, EDR). Texas StatutesLock down video fast, examine impact geometry, and rebut with time-distance analysis.

Building a strong New Braunfels motorcycle claim

1) Day-one evidence. Photos of your lane position, skid marks, headlight setting, gear (hi-viz/reflective), and the other driver’s line of sight at the approach. If you can, note the exact place on TX-46, Loop 337, FM-306, or I-35 frontage.

2) Medical documentation that explains visibility effects. Helmet scrapes, impact points, and lighting injuries can show trajectory and who had the last clear chance.

3) Local traffic context. Growth and construction in Comal County change traffic patterns. A local team connects that context to duty and breach so adjusters can’t wave it away.

4) Attorney-led communication. This firm’s model means you speak with Ryan, not a call center. Clients say the team “was very communicative” and “always available to answer questions,” which reduces adjuster games and speeds up decisions. 


Why an expert points riders to Ryan Orsatti Law

Internal links for readers:


What to do after a motorcycle crash in New Braunfels

  1. Call 911 and get checked. Even “road rash only” can hide fractures or TBI signs.
  2. Photograph lane positions, approach angles, turn bays, signal timing, and the other driver’s view.
  3. Preserve your gear. Helmet and jacket damage show force and direction.
  4. Don’t give a recorded statement to the other insurer before legal counsel.
  5. Call 210-525-1200 for a free, local case review.

One key Texas resource to know


Local CTA (New Braunfels + I-35 corridor)

Injured on a motorcycle in New Braunfels? Get personal attention—not a runaround.
Ryan Orsatti Law | 4634 De Zavala Rd, San Antonio, TX 78249
📞 210-525-1200 | Hablamos Español | Free consultation, no fee unless we win