4701 Oleander Drive, Suite A
Myrtle Beach, SC 29577
4701 Oleander Drive, Suite A
Myrtle Beach, SC 29577
Delivery drivers keep Myrtle Beach moving. They maneuver packages, groceries, food orders, and supplies through crowded resort corridors and snarled neighborhood streets. A Myrtle Beach delivery driver injury lawyer at Axelrod & Associates, P.A. can help identify who is at fault and how the accident occurred.
In the event of an injury, it may not be immediately clear whether you have a workers’ compensation claim or a third-party negligence claim. An attorney can also help you understand what benefits or compensation you may be entitled to under the laws of South Carolina. You should have a basic understanding of your rights as soon as possible.

Axelrod & Associates, P.A. has decades of experience helping injured workers and drivers throughout Myrtle Beach. We know how delivery routes can be built on busy roads like Kings Highway, Highway 17, and the corridors that funnel through major resorts and beach hotels. Clients work directly with their attorney and receive clear, understandable explanations of their workers’ compensation, liability, and potential third-party claims.
Our experience with commercial vehicle collisions and on-the-job injuries means that drivers get the information they need to make informed decisions about their case at the first consultation.
Drivers on delivery routes face conditions that can change by the hour. Traffic patterns for tourists and locals combine on Kings Highway. Tight turns through the hotel zone along Ocean Boulevard.
Crowded neighborhoods that receive constant DoorDash, Amazon, and grocery deliveries. Injuries can occur when drivers become lost or disoriented in unfamiliar apartment complexes when rushing to meet a deadline or accidentally slip on slick pavement during bad weather.
Collisions with distracted drivers and poorly marked parking areas are common. Understanding where and when the injury occurred is an important part of determining whether the claim is limited to workers’ compensation or involves third-party liability.
Delivery drivers are often in a hurry, and small details can disappear fast after an accident. Gathering the right evidence early on can strengthen the claim and clarify fault. Helpful information may include:
Accident patterns for delivery drivers reveal serious risks that are built into the job. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, there were 1,942 fatal work injuries caused by transportation incidents nationally in 2023. That category is the largest single cause of job-related deaths.
Private industry employers in South Carolina tallied 30,100 nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses in 2023. The total number of recordable cases had a rate of 1.9 per 100 full-time workers. The trade, transportation, and utilities sector, which includes many delivery jobs, experienced a higher total recordable case rate of 2.8 per 100 workers, highlighting just how dangerous jobs in transportation can be in South Carolina.
Delivery drivers in Myrtle Beach, whether delivering food, groceries, or packages, face that same exposure every day. Knowing that background can be important when assessing whether your employer or another party may share liability for what happened.
A delivery driver who was injured in Myrtle Beach should document the scene of the accident before it changes. Photos, delivery app time stamps, damaged equipment, roadway hazards, and other factors can help establish what happened. Reporting the injury to your employer and receiving medical care right away also creates a clean record of events. These steps will both protect your rights and help establish whether the resulting claim involves workers’ compensation, third-party negligence, or both.
Delivery driver injuries are far more common than most people realize, and national data bears this out. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, transportation incidents caused 1,942 fatal occupational injuries in 2023, the highest of any event category. This included delivery drivers, who must routinely navigate congested areas, tight deadlines, and unpredictable traffic. The frequency of these accidents helps explain why multiple layers of liability are common in delivery driver injury claims.
Delivery workers are particularly vulnerable to nonfatal injuries, according to the BLS Of South Carolina’s 30,100 injury and illness cases for private industry in 2023, 19,000 involved days away from work, job transfer, or restriction. In 2023, the trade, transportation, and utilities sector in South Carolina saw 9,800 recordable injury/illness cases. Of these, 7,000 involved days away from work, job transfer, or restriction. These injuries frequently result from collisions, falls, and strains from lifting.
A delivery driver can file a claim against someone other than their employer when a third party causes or contributes to the accident. This commonly occurs when another driver, a negligent property owner, or a contractor creates the hazard that led to the injury. A third-party claim can run alongside a workers’ compensation case, giving injured drivers the opportunity to pursue damages not covered by workers’ compensation.
The layout of roads and seasonal tourist hotspots in Myrtle Beach dictates delivery driver injuries through daily and seasonal traffic variations. Delivery routes near Kings Highway, Ocean Boulevard, and along the Highway 17 corridor often include stops at multiple locations where there are sudden stops, pedestrians jaywalking, or visitors unfamiliar with the area’s street names. Traffic patterns and pedestrian distractions can increase the likelihood of colliding with other vehicles and pedestrians or slipping and falling while making deliveries.
Delivery drivers are exposed to hazards the average person never encounters, such as short delivery times, congested Myrtle Beach thoroughfares, unknown apartment buildings, and a continual push to meet the deadline. When an accident does happen, the difficult task is often determining whether a claim should be pursued via workers’ compensation, a third-party case, or both.
The lawyers at Axelrod & Associates, P.A. review delivery app information, roadway conditions, and employer policies to determine how the accident happened and who might be at fault. If you were injured while delivering in Myrtle Beach, our firm can help explain your options and guide you through the next steps. Contact our team today and let us put our knowledge and experience to work for you.

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