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Texting While Driving Accidents in Raleigh, NC

Raleigh texting while driving accident guide: NC statutes 20-137.4A and 20-137.3, proving phone use after a crash, I-440 commuter rear-ends, and how contributory negligence applies.

Published | Updated | 9 min read

The Bottom Line

Texting while driving is the single most dangerous form of distracted driving on Raleigh's roads because it combines visual, manual, and cognitive distraction in one act. At 55 mph, reading a text takes your eyes off the road for about 5 seconds -- enough to travel the length of a football field blind. NC law explicitly bans texting for all drivers under N.C. Gen. Stat. 20-137.4A, and drivers under 18 are prohibited from all phone use under N.C. Gen. Stat. 20-137.3. If another driver was texting when they hit you, their statutory violation is powerful evidence of negligence. But if you were also texting, NC's contributory negligence rule can bar your entire claim -- even if the other driver was 99% at fault.

NC Law on Texting While Driving

North Carolina has two statutes that address phone use behind the wheel, and understanding the distinction matters for any texting-related crash claim in Raleigh.

N.C. Gen. Stat. 20-137.4A

Prohibits all drivers from reading, writing, or sending text messages or emails while driving. Also bans manually entering data into a phone for any purpose other than making a call. Does not prohibit handheld voice calls for drivers over 18.

N.C. Gen. Stat. 20-137.3

Prohibits drivers under 18 from all cell phone use while driving, including voice calls, texting, and any other mobile phone operation. Also applies to school bus drivers.

The key legal point: texting while driving is a per se violation of state law for every driver in North Carolina. When a driver causes a crash while texting, the statutory violation is direct evidence of negligence. Unlike other forms of distraction -- eating, adjusting the radio, talking to a passenger -- texting has a specific statute prohibiting it. This makes texting cases stronger from an evidence standpoint than general distracted driving claims.

However, the law has a significant gap. Handheld phone calls remain legal for adults over 18. This means a driver can legally hold their phone to their ear on I-440, and the line between a "legal" call and an "illegal" glance at a text notification is practically invisible to other drivers and often to the distracted driver themselves.

Why Texting Crashes Are So Common in Raleigh

Raleigh's road network and commute patterns create conditions that make texting behind the wheel dangerously tempting.

Stop-and-Go Congestion on I-440 and I-40

Raleigh's two most heavily traveled highways -- I-440 (the Beltline) circling inner Raleigh and I-40 connecting to Durham and RTP -- are notorious for stop-and-go traffic during rush hours. When traffic slows to a crawl on the Beltline between the Capital Boulevard interchange and the I-40 interchange, or along I-40 through the RTP corridor, drivers stuck at low speeds reach for their phones. The false sense of safety at 5 mph leads drivers to read and send texts. Then traffic opens up, they are still looking at the screen, and they rear-end the vehicle ahead at a speed differential that causes real injuries.

Long Triangle Commutes

Raleigh's position within the Research Triangle means tens of thousands of workers commute between Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill, and RTP daily, facing 30- to 60-minute drives each way. Long commutes breed boredom and the urge to stay connected. Drivers leaving RTP at 5:30 PM for a 45-minute crawl on I-40 back to Raleigh are prime candidates for texting-related crashes.

High-Volume Surface Streets

Capital Boulevard, Glenwood Avenue, Six Forks Road, and Falls of Neuse Road carry heavy traffic with frequent signal stops. The red-light-to-red-light rhythm on these corridors creates a pattern: stop at red, pick up phone, start texting, light turns green, look up too late -- the car ahead has already stopped again. This cycle is responsible for a large share of texting-related rear-end crashes on Raleigh's surface streets.

NC State University Area

The area around NC State University adds a particular texting risk. Over 30,000 students, many of them young drivers with the highest rates of phone use behind the wheel, drive through the Hillsborough Street and Western Boulevard corridors during the academic year. The combination of heavy pedestrian traffic, frequent stops, and a demographic accustomed to constant phone connectivity makes the NC State area a hotspot for texting-related crashes.

How Texting Differs from General Distracted Driving

While texting while driving is a subset of distracted driving, it occupies a distinct legal and practical category that affects how claims are handled in Raleigh.

The Triple-Threat Distraction

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration classifies distraction into three types: visual, manual, and cognitive. Most distractions involve one or two. Texting is unique because it involves all three simultaneously:

  • Visual -- Your eyes leave the road to look at the screen
  • Manual -- At least one hand leaves the wheel to hold and type on the phone
  • Cognitive -- Your mind shifts from driving to composing or reading a message

This triple distraction is why studies consistently show texting while driving increases crash risk far more than other forms of distraction.

Because texting violates a specific NC statute, a texting-while-driving crash gives you a stronger legal foundation than a general distracted driving claim. If the other driver was eating a sandwich or changing the radio station, you need to prove that behavior was unreasonable. If they were texting, you need only prove they were texting -- the statute establishes that the behavior itself is illegal, and the violation creates a presumption of negligence.

Proving the Other Driver Was Texting

Establishing that the other driver was texting at the moment of your crash requires specific evidence, and much of it is time-sensitive.

Phone Records Subpoena

Your attorney can subpoena the other driver's cell phone records from their wireless carrier. These records document the precise time of every text message sent and received, call logs, and data usage. By matching these timestamps against the crash time recorded in the police report, you can establish that the driver was actively texting at the moment of impact. Carriers retain detailed records for limited periods -- typically 1 to 2 years for text message metadata -- so acting quickly is essential.

Cell Tower Data

Cell tower records show when a phone was actively communicating with a tower, including data transmissions. If the other driver's phone was sending or receiving data at the time of the crash, cell tower records can confirm their phone was in active use. This evidence is particularly useful when the driver claims they were not touching their phone.

Witness Testimony

Witnesses can provide critical evidence. Other drivers may have seen the at-fault driver looking down at their phone before the crash. Passengers in the at-fault vehicle may admit the driver was texting. Even witnesses who arrived at the scene immediately after the crash may have seen the phone in the driver's hand or lap, or noticed a messaging app open on the screen.

Dashcam and Surveillance Footage

Dashcam footage from your vehicle, other vehicles, or commercial trucks can capture the at-fault driver looking down at their lap or holding a phone. Traffic cameras along I-440, I-540, and major Raleigh intersections may also capture the moments before the crash. NCDOT traffic camera footage is typically overwritten within days, so a preservation request must be sent immediately after the crash.

The Police Report

Raleigh PD officers responding to the scene may document observations relevant to texting: a phone in the driver's hand, an open messaging app on the screen, or the driver's own admission that they were reading or sending a text. Always tell the responding officer if you believe the other driver was texting. Request that this observation be included in the crash report. Raleigh PD crash reports are available at 6716 Six Forks Road or by calling (919) 996-3335.

Common Texting Crash Scenarios in Raleigh

Texting-related crashes in Raleigh follow predictable patterns tied to specific roads and traffic conditions.

Rear-End Collisions on I-440

I-440 is Raleigh's most common location for texting-related rear-end crashes. The pattern repeats daily: traffic flows at highway speed, then suddenly slows at congestion points near the I-40 interchange, Capital Boulevard, or Glenwood Avenue. A driver reading a text at 60 mph does not notice the brake lights ahead until it is too late. The speed differential between a texting driver and stopped traffic creates high-impact rear-end collisions with serious injury potential.

Running Red Lights on Capital Boulevard

Capital Boulevard's signal-heavy corridor creates a specific texting pattern. Drivers pick up their phone at a red light, begin composing a text, and then continue looking at the screen as the light changes and traffic moves. When they finally look up, they are approaching the next intersection at speed -- and the light is red. Texting-related red light runs on Capital Boulevard are a leading cause of T-bone collisions in north Raleigh.

Lane Drift on I-40

Texting while driving on I-40 between Raleigh and RTP frequently causes lane-drift crashes. A driver composing a text gradually drifts from their lane, sideswiping the vehicle next to them or crossing into oncoming lanes on undivided sections. The congested I-40 corridor through the Harrison Avenue and Aviation Parkway exits sees particular risk because drivers reach for their phones during the stop-and-go crawl, then fail to look up when traffic clears and speeds increase.

Intersection Failures on Glenwood and Six Forks

Glenwood Avenue through the Crabtree Valley area and Six Forks Road through north Raleigh carry heavy traffic with frequent turns and pedestrian crossings. Texting drivers approaching intersections on these corridors fail to notice turning traffic, pedestrians in crosswalks, or vehicles stopping to make left turns. These crashes often involve pedestrians and cyclists who are invisible to a driver staring at a phone screen.

After a Texting Crash in Raleigh: What to Know

Raleigh PD Crash Reports

For crashes within Raleigh city limits, Raleigh PD handles the investigation. Request your crash report at 6716 Six Forks Road or call (919) 996-3335. Review the report carefully for any mention of phone use, texting, or distraction by the other driver. For crashes on I-440, I-540, or state-maintained highways, NCSHP may handle the report -- obtain those through the NC DMV crash report portal.

Medical Treatment

If you are injured in a texting-related crash in Raleigh, the closest Level I trauma center is WakeMed Raleigh Campus at 3000 New Bern Avenue. For less severe injuries, UNC REX Hospital at 4420 Lake Boone Trail (Level III Trauma Center) and Duke Raleigh Hospital at 3400 Wake Forest Road provide emergency services. Document all medical treatment from the first visit -- insurance companies will scrutinize gaps in treatment.

Court Information

Personal injury claims from Raleigh crashes are filed in Wake County Superior Court at the Wake County Justice Center, 316 Fayetteville Street. Smaller claims may be heard in Wake County District Court at the same location. If the at-fault driver received a citation for texting under N.C. Gen. Stat. 20-137.4A, that traffic case will be heard separately but the citation itself is admissible evidence in your civil claim.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the penalty for texting while driving in Raleigh, NC?
Can phone records prove the other driver was texting when they hit me in Raleigh?
What happens to my claim if I was also texting when the crash happened in Raleigh?
How is a texting while driving accident different from other distracted driving accidents?