In This Article
Many of the most serious intersection crashes in Nevada happen when a driver fails to yield the right of way — pulling out from a stop sign, merging without clearance, or turning into oncoming traffic. Understanding right-of-way rules helps clarify who is responsible when these collisions cause injury.
Nevada's Right-of-Way Rules
Traffic laws establish who must yield in various situations: at stop and yield signs, when merging, when turning, and to pedestrians in crosswalks. A driver who violates these rules and causes a crash is typically negligent and responsible for the resulting harm.
Common Failure-to-Yield Scenarios
These crashes often occur when a driver misjudges oncoming traffic at an intersection, fails to stop fully at a sign, merges into another vehicle's path, or turns across traffic. The injuries can be severe, particularly in side-impact collisions.
Proving the Violation
Establishing that the other driver failed to yield relies on witness accounts, the physical evidence of the crash, traffic-camera footage, and the police investigation. Because drivers often dispute who had the right of way, objective evidence is key.
Protecting Your Claim
Under Nevada's comparative negligence rule, the other driver's insurer may try to shift some blame onto you. Documenting the scene and securing witnesses protects your recovery. A free review can help establish fault in a failure-to-yield crash.