That depends on what you mean by a car accident. If you are talking about a car crash it would be about 0.3 on average. Most people are never involved in an auto crash with two moving vehicles in their life. If you are talking about tapping someones bumper while parallel parking or backing out of a spot, maybe your car door opens and nicks the paint on an adjacent vehicle, then it would average about 3.
One out of every four people will be ina car accident in their lifetime. Your chances of dieing in a car accident are 1 out of every 140 people.
Zero, cars are parked more often than they are driven.
Your odds of dying in a car accident: 1 in 18,585. Your odds of dying in a plane accident: 1 in 354,319
one in 100 or 10in a 1000
The average payout for pain and suffering from a car accident is based on the type of injury and the duration of pain associated with the injury. Payouts also take into consideration the amount of time a person has been kept from their normal duties, such as a job. There is no set average payout for pain and suffering from a car accident and most states limit the amount of money a person can collect for this type of claim.
Momentum! Car has momentum before an accident, this momentum is transferred to the person after the car has made an abrupt stop (accident).
The person that is responsible for the accident.
It depends, most of the time it is just a 50-50 chance that the person who caused the crash gets cited for the car accident, it is not rare, but not common either.
It depends what the other person in the car accident was doing.
the insurance of the person responsible for the accident
one person died in "the" car accident in vietnam.........
drake bell
yes
Whether the car is insured is not important, the point is who was at fault in causing the accident, it could be the person whose car is insured that is at fault.
its because of accident
According to Gazette's six year road accident analytics, Montereal roads don't have a particularly high car accident, but can be considered below average.