Sun Glare Accidents: Liability and Prevention
Sun glare is a surprisingly deadly hazard. Those blinding moments when the sun hits your eyes at the wrong angle cause thousands of accidents annually. Understanding fault and how to protect yourself is essential.
Why Sun Glare Is So Dangerous
Temporary Blindness
The effects of sun glare on vision:
- Complete inability to see for several seconds
- Afterimages that persist even after glare passes
- Difficulty seeing brake lights and signals
- Road hazards become invisible
- Pedestrians and cyclists can't be seen
Predictable Yet Dangerous
Unlike sudden weather changes, sun glare is:
- Predictable based on time of day and season
- Worse during spring and fall equinoxes
- Most dangerous during commute hours
- Aligned with busy traffic periods
- Often worse in specific locations
The Danger Window
| Season | Morning Peak | Evening Peak |
|---|---|---|
| Winter | 7:30-9:00 AM | 4:00-5:30 PM |
| Spring/Fall | 6:30-8:00 AM | 5:30-7:00 PM |
| Summer | 5:30-7:00 AM | 7:00-8:30 PM |
Fault in Sun Glare Accidents
The Legal Standard
Despite temporary blindness, drivers are responsible:
- Must anticipate sun glare during certain hours
- Should slow down when vision is impaired
- Cannot use "I was blinded" as an excuse
- Must maintain ability to stop within sight distance
- Required to use available protection (visors, sunglasses)
Who Is at Fault?
The driver who was blinded:
- Almost always bears primary responsibility
- Should have taken precautions
- Should have slowed or stopped if couldn't see
- Cannot claim "act of God" for predictable conditions
Potential shared liability:
- Road designers who created dangerous alignments
- Traffic engineers who placed signals in glare zones
- Other drivers who contributed to the accident
- Property owners whose structures caused reflective glare
Defenses That Don't Work
- "The sun was in my eyes" - You should have adjusted
- "I couldn't see anything" - You should have stopped
- "It happened so fast" - Sun position is predictable
- "My visor didn't help" - Should have worn sunglasses or slowed down
Common Sun Glare Scenarios
East-West Roads at Commute Times
The problem: Morning eastbound and evening westbound traffic faces direct sun at eye level during peak commute hours.
High-risk situations:
- Cresting hills into the sun
- Exiting tunnels or underpasses
- Leaving shaded areas
- After traffic lights turn green
Intersection Accidents
What happens: Driver can't see traffic signal or cross traffic due to glare.
Fault analysis:
- Running a red light remains fault regardless of glare
- Should have known signal location
- Should have stopped if unsure
- "I couldn't see the light" increases fault
Rear-End Collisions
What happens: Driver can't see brake lights of vehicle ahead.
Fault analysis:
- Following driver at fault for not adjusting
- Should have increased following distance
- Brake lights being invisible doesn't excuse the collision
- Should have slowed when experiencing glare
Pedestrian and Cyclist Strikes
What happens: Driver can't see vulnerable road users against sun.
Fault analysis:
- Driver fault for not stopping when blinded
- Pedestrians/cyclists may share fault if crossing illegally
- School zones and crosswalks require extra caution
- Driver had duty to stop if couldn't see
Evidence in Sun Glare Claims
What Helps Your Case
If the other driver claims sun glare:
- Weather service data confirming sun position
- Photos showing sun angle at accident time
- Evidence they weren't wearing sunglasses
- Dashcam footage of conditions
- Witness statements about their speed
What Hurts Your Case
If you're claiming glare contributed:
- Not wearing sunglasses
- Visor not deployed
- Dirty windshield
- Following too closely
- Speeding for conditions
Documenting Sun Position
After a sun glare accident:
- Note exact time of accident
- Use compass apps to determine sun direction
- Photograph the road direction
- Note any factors blocking or intensifying glare
- Get witness statements about visibility
Preventing Sun Glare Accidents
Vehicle Preparation
Windshield condition:
- Keep windshield clean inside and out
- Replace worn wiper blades
- Fix any chips or cracks (scatter light)
- Use anti-glare coating if available
Visors and accessories:
- Ensure visor works properly
- Consider visor extenders
- Use polarized sunglasses
- Keep glasses in car for emergencies
Driving Techniques
When glare hits:
- Slow down immediately
- Use visor and sunglasses
- Increase following distance significantly
- Use lane markings as guide
- Consider pulling over if severe
Route planning:
- Know which roads have bad glare
- Consider alternate routes during peak times
- Leave earlier or later to avoid worst angles
- Use GPS apps that show road direction
High-Risk Awareness
Times to be extra cautious:
- Spring and fall (sun lower in sky)
- First and last hour of daylight
- After time changes (routes suddenly in sun)
- Clear days (no clouds to diffuse)
Locations to watch:
- East-west oriented roads
- Hill crests facing sun
- Tunnel and underpass exits
- Intersections facing sun
Sun Glare and Traffic Signals
Why Signals Become Invisible
- Backlit by sun, making lights indistinguishable
- Visor blocks signal from view
- Glare washes out colored lights
- Driver focused on road, not signal position
Signal Design Solutions
Many jurisdictions have:
- Backplates (hoods) around signals
- LED lights with higher intensity
- Polarized lenses on signals
- Programmable timing for known glare periods
Driver Responsibility
Even with poor signal visibility:
- Drivers must know intersection rules
- Should remember signal locations
- Must stop if unsure of signal status
- Can't proceed through if can't confirm green
Insurance Considerations
How Insurers View Sun Glare
Insurance companies typically:
- Assign fault to the driver claiming glare
- View sun position as predictable
- Expect drivers to take precautions
- Don't accept glare as mitigating factor
Filing Your Claim
Include in your documentation:
- Time of accident (correlate with sun position)
- Direction of travel
- What precautions you took (sunglasses, visor)
- Speed you were traveling
- Following distance
Rate Impact
Sun glare accidents:
- Are typically treated as at-fault accidents
- Will likely increase your rates
- May be considered preventable
- Could affect safe driver discounts
Sun Glare Statistics
| Statistic | Number |
|---|---|
| Annual sun glare crashes | 9,000+ |
| Annual sun glare fatalities | 60+ |
| Peak accident times | 7-8 AM, 5-6 PM |
| Most dangerous months | March, September, October |
| Pedestrians killed in glare crashes | 40+ annually |
Regional Considerations
Southwest (AZ, NM, NV)
- Intense sun year-round
- Less cloud cover to diffuse
- Long stretches of east-west highways
- Reflective desert surfaces intensify glare
Florida and Gulf Coast
- Strong sun at low latitudes
- Reflective water and sand
- Many east-west coastal roads
- Tourist drivers unfamiliar with conditions
Mountain Regions
- Sun appears suddenly from behind peaks
- Reflective snow intensifies glare
- Winding roads with changing orientations
- Altitude increases UV intensity
Key Takeaways
- Sun glare causes 9,000+ crashes annually
- Drivers are responsible for anticipating predictable glare
- "I was blinded" is not a legal defense
- Must slow down or stop if you can't see
- Polarized sunglasses and clean windshields help
- East-west roads during commute hours are highest risk
- Document time and direction of travel in any sun-related crash
For more on weather driving hazards, see our guides on Fog Accidents and Rain Accident Fault.