New York's no-fault system protects most drivers' medical bills — but generally not motorcyclists. Here's what that means if you ride.
New York's no-fault insurance system pays the early medical bills of most people injured in car accidents, regardless of fault. But there is a critical exception that every rider should understand: motorcyclists are generally excluded from no-fault (PIP) benefits. This single fact changes how a motorcycle injury claim works.
What the exclusion means in practice
Because a motorcyclist usually cannot turn to no-fault for medical coverage, the claim against the at-fault driver becomes the primary path to paying for treatment and recovery — not just for pain and suffering. That raises the stakes of proving liability and documenting injuries correctly from the very beginning.
Without PIP, riders often rely on their own health insurance for initial treatment while the liability claim proceeds. Keeping careful records of every bill is essential.
Fighting the 'reckless rider' bias
Riders face an unfair presumption — from some drivers, police, and insurers — that they must have been speeding or weaving. That bias is a defense strategy. Scene evidence, witness statements, and the physical facts of the crash are how it is dismantled. Under New York's pure comparative negligence rule, you can recover even if you are found partly at fault; your award is simply reduced by your percentage.
The bottom line for riders
If you ride, do not assume the system will catch you the way it catches car occupants. Preserve your bike and gear as evidence, get prompt medical care, and get legal advice early — because for motorcyclists, the liability claim is not a bonus, it is the whole case.