Underride crashes happen when a smaller vehicle slides under the rear or side of a tractor-trailer or other large commercial vehicle. These wrecks are often unsurvivable—and when someone does survive, the injuries are frequently life-altering. In Texas, underride cases also tend to be heavily disputed, because the evidence can disappear quickly and trucking insurers often argue the passenger vehicle “caused” the crash.

Quick Answer: What makes underride crashes so dangerous, and what matters right away?

If you suspect an underride scenario, treat it like an evidence emergency: get medical care first, then preserve documentation and identify witnesses as soon as possible.


What is an underride crash?

An underride crash occurs when a passenger vehicle goes partially or fully under a truck or trailer. The most common patterns include:

While these crashes can involve any large vehicle, they are frequently associated with tractor-trailers, including flatbeds and trailers with higher clearance.


Why underride crashes cause catastrophic injuries

Underride wrecks are uniquely destructive because they defeat the engineering that protects occupants in most standard collisions.

1) The impact bypasses the car’s “crush zone”

Most passenger vehicles are designed to absorb energy through the front end. In an underride, the collision force may be transferred directly to the windshield, A-pillars, roofline, and occupant space, where there is far less protective structure.

2) Airbags may not deploy effectively

Airbag deployment depends on sensors detecting certain crash dynamics. Underride crashes can create atypical impact profiles, meaning airbags may deploy late, deploy incompletely, or not at all.

3) Traumatic brain injury and spinal trauma are common

Because the occupant compartment is compromised, survivors often suffer:

4) “Secondary impacts” worsen outcomes

Even when the initial underride is survivable, secondary impacts—like vehicle rotation, rollover, or a second collision—can compound injury severity.


Where underride crashes happen in San Antonio and Bexar County

Underride risk increases anywhere there is heavy commercial traffic and higher-speed merging or lane changes. In the San Antonio region, that often means major corridors and interchanges where drivers may encounter:

The location alone does not determine fault. What matters is the sequence of events and whether preventable safety failures contributed.


What causes underride crashes? The real-world factors investigators look for

Insurance companies may try to reduce the story to “the car rear-ended the truck.” A proper investigation is broader. Common contributing factors include:

Visibility and conspicuity problems

Unsafe stopping, parking, or blocking travel lanes

Underride guard issues

Rear underride guards (“ICC bumpers”) can fail due to:

Side underride protection is a different topic and may depend on trailer type, configuration, and applicable standards. Regardless, investigators examine whether a safer configuration was feasible and whether required equipment was maintained.

Driver behavior and compliance

Company-level safety failures


How underride cases are investigated in Texas

Underride cases are evidence-driven. The goal is to reconstruct what happened and why the underride occurred (and why it was so severe).

Step-by-step: what a thorough investigation typically includes

  1. Scene documentation
    • Measurements, skid marks, gouge marks, debris field
    • Photographs from multiple angles (including undercarriage points)
    • Lighting conditions and line-of-sight analysis
  2. Vehicle inspections
    • Passenger vehicle crush profile and intrusion points
    • Trailer/guard condition, height, damage patterns
  3. Electronic data collection
    • Truck ECM/“black box” (speed, braking, throttle, engine events)
    • ELD logs (driving time, rest periods, duty status)
    • Telematics/GPS and fleet systems
  4. Video and third-party sources
    • Dashcams, surveillance cameras, traffic cameras (when available)
    • Nearby businesses, residences, or fleets with exterior cameras
  5. Driver and company records
    • Driver qualification file, training, medical certification (as applicable)
    • Maintenance and inspection records
    • Load records, bills of lading, dispatch communications
  6. Witness and first responder interviews
    • Independent witnesses, other motorists
    • Officers and crash reconstruction personnel
  7. Medical and damages documentation
    • EMS and trauma records
    • Imaging (CT/MRI), neurocognitive testing (for TBI)
    • Future care planning, rehab needs, work restrictions

In trucking cases, investigators often evaluate compliance with Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs) and applicable Texas safety rules. Violations do not automatically prove liability, but they can be important evidence of negligence depending on the facts.


Evidence checklist: what can make or break an underride claim

If you or a loved one is dealing with an underride crash, you want to preserve evidence early. Here is a practical overview of what commonly matters.

Evidence TypeWhere It Comes FromWhy It Matters in Underride Cases
Photos/video of the scenePhones, witnesses, nearby camerasCaptures vehicle positions, lighting, guard condition, road environment before changes occur
Trailer rear/side lighting conditionScene photos, inspection, maintenance logsSupports visibility/conspicuity issues, defective lights, missing reflectors/tape
Underride guard measurements and damageTrailer inspection, reconstruction expertsDetermines whether the guard engaged, failed, or was compromised by design/condition
Truck ECM (“black box”) dataTruck electronic module downloadShows speed, braking, throttle, and critical events leading up to impact
ELD recordsCarrier systemsHelps evaluate fatigue, hours-of-service compliance, and timeline credibility
Dashcam/telematicsTruck, third partiesProvides objective account of braking, lane position, and pre-crash behavior
Maintenance/inspection recordsCarrier filesCan reveal neglected repairs, known defects, or poor safety practices
Witness statementsIndependent motorists, first respondersCan corroborate sudden stops, dark trailers, unsafe maneuvers, or blocked lanes
Medical documentationHospitals, specialistsConnects crash mechanics to injuries, establishes severity and future needs

Common insurance defenses in underride crashes (and how they are addressed)

Underride cases often involve aggressive defenses. Expect arguments such as:

“The car rear-ended the trailer, so it’s the driver’s fault.”

Rear impact is not the end of the analysis. Investigators look at:

“They were speeding or distracted.”

These issues may be disputed with:

“Their injuries are from pre-existing problems.”

A careful medical presentation distinguishes:

Texas proportionate responsibility and why it matters

Texas uses proportionate responsibility (often discussed in connection with Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code Chapter 33). In practical terms:

That is why early, objective evidence is so important in underride litigation.


What should you do after an underride crash in Texas?

Medical care comes first. After that, the actions you take can materially affect what can be proven later.

Immediate steps (days 1–7)

Documentation steps (weeks 1–4)

Mistakes that can hurt a valid underride claim


How long do underride cases take?

Timelines vary by injury severity, disputed liability, and the number of parties involved. A realistic sequence often looks like this:

The right pace depends on medical progress and the evidentiary posture. Settling too early can create problems if future care needs are not yet understood.


Attorney Insight: what makes underride cases different from “typical” wreck claims

Underride crashes are not just “bigger car wrecks.” They often require:

If an underride crash caused catastrophic injuries or a death, the case usually turns on details that are easy to miss early—especially trailer conspicuity, guard condition, and electronic data.


FAQs about underride crashes in Texas

Can I bring a claim if my family member died in an underride crash?

Possibly. Texas law allows certain family members to pursue wrongful death and related claims in appropriate circumstances. The facts, responsible parties, and available insurance coverage must be evaluated.

What if the trucking company says the trailer lights were working?

That is commonly disputed. Photos, witness statements, inspection findings, maintenance records, and sometimes electronic or telematics data can help evaluate whether lighting and conspicuity were adequate at the time of the crash.

Do underride guards always prevent catastrophic injury?

No. Guards can reduce risk in some scenarios, but they can also fail due to condition, design, attachment, or crash dynamics. An inspection and reconstruction analysis is often required.

Is the driver always at fault if they hit the back of a trailer?

Not necessarily. Fault analysis may include trailer visibility, stopping behavior, lane positioning, safety-rule compliance, and equipment condition. Texas proportionate responsibility rules can apply.

How is a traumatic brain injury (TBI) documented after an underride crash?

Documentation can include ER/trauma records, imaging, symptom tracking, neurocognitive testing, specialist evaluations, and consistency of complaints over time. Early reporting of symptoms matters.

Should I give the trucking insurer a recorded statement?

Be cautious. Recorded statements can lock you into incomplete facts early and may be used to dispute liability or minimize injuries. It is reasonable to understand your rights and the investigative process before providing detailed recorded statements.


Ryan Orsatti Law
4634 De Zavala Rd, San Antonio, TX 78249
Phone: 210-525-1200

“This blog is for informational purposes only, not legal advice. Reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee future results.”