Who it’s for: Texans hurt in crashes involving DoorDash or Uber Eats drivers using their own cars—drivers, passengers, pedestrians, and other motorists.
When to read: Right after a collision or while you’re deciding who to file a claim against.
What you’ll learn: How “gig periods” control coverage, why personal policies often deny, the limits these apps provide, and how to protect your claim in Texas.


The short answer

Coverage follows the driver’s app status at the exact moment of the crash:


Why personal auto insurers say “no” (and what Texas law allows)

Most Texas personal auto policies have a business-use/rideshare/delivery exclusion. Texas law expressly permitscarriers to exclude coverage when a vehicle is used to carry people or property for compensation (i.e., gig driving). (Texas Statutes)

Texas also sets minimum insurance rules for rideshare (TNC) periods:

Key takeaway: If a personal carrier denies because the driver was “working,” don’t stop there—the platform’s policy may still apply.


Coverage, period by period (DoorDash vs. Uber/Uber Eats)

1) App OFF

2) App ON, waiting (no order yet)

3) On assignment (en route to pickup, or transporting the order)


Texas proof problems: How we lock down “app status”

In Texas, the status at impact drives coverage. For rideshare, Chapter 1954 requires companies to assist insurers with precise log-on/off times and coverage details after a crash; we leverage those rules and use subpoenas and preservation letters to secure similar data from delivery platforms. (Texas Statutes)

What we gather fast:

Need help pulling recordings? See our guide: [How to Pull 911 Audio](https://www.ryanorsattilaw.com/blog/how-to-pull-911-audio).


Where your recovery can come from

Think of coverage “layers” you can tap, depending on fault and status:

  1. At-fault platform liability (Uber/Uber Eats/ DoorDash) per the period rules above. (UberDoorDash Help)
  2. Driver’s personal policy (if no valid exclusion or during OFF period). (Texas Statutes)
  3. Your own UM/UIM and PIP/MedPay. If the at-fault driver is underinsured or coverage is disputed, Texas UM/UIM can bridge the gap. (We structure demands to avoid offsets and preserve stacking arguments.)
  4. Property damage & rentals. Uber’s contingent comp/collision can help its driver while on a trip (with a deductible). For third parties, you pursue the at-fault liability coverage for repairs, total loss, and loss of use. (Uber)

How adjusters push back (and how we counter)


What to do right now (10-minute checklist)

  1. Call 911; get the report number.
  2. Photograph plates, damage, app screens, and the scene.
  3. Ask the driver: “Are you logged in? Which app?” Note whether they’d accepted an order.
  4. Get the platform incident link (Uber has a third-party crash portal). (Uber)
  5. See a doctor within 24–48 hours; tell them it was a delivery-app crash.
  6. Call Ryan Orsatti Law before giving a recorded statement.

We also preserve in-app data and send targeted preservation letters to the platform and insurers on day one.


FAQ (fast)

Does Texas law guarantee $1M for DoorDash?
Texas statutes set $1M for rideshare trips (TNC). Delivery apps (DoorDash/Uber Eats) contractually provide their own coverage—Uber mirrors TNC levels on trips; DoorDash states $1M on active delivery. We verify the current certificate in your case. (Texas StatutesUberDoorDash Help)

If the DoorDash driver was only “online,” not yet assigned?
DoorDash says it maintains liability during “Delivery Available.” Whether and how it applies can depend on the driver’s personal policy and claim handling; we gather logs to confirm. (DoorDash Help)

Why did the personal carrier deny?
Because Texas allows exclusions for paid driving/delivery; that’s why platform policies exist. (Texas Statutes)


Reference

Additional primary sources used in our analysis: Uber Insurance for Rideshare and Delivery Drivers(coverage by period) and Texas Insurance Code Chapter 1954 (TNC minimums). (UberTexas Statutes)



Talk to a Texas lawyer who knows gig-app claims

If you were hit by a DoorDash or Uber Eats driver—or you were the driver and the insurer is punting you between policies—we can line up the right coverage and move your claim forward. Call Ryan Orsatti Law now or send a message 24/7.

Ryan Orsatti Law
4634 De Zavala Road │ San Antonio, TX 78249
T. 210.525.1200

Free consultation. No fee unless we win.