Every day on the 400-series highways, the DVP, and the streets of North York, drivers glance down at a screen just for a few seconds. Those few seconds of not looking at the road may not seem like a big deal, but it’s enough time to cause a serious accident. Distracted driving has become one of the most significant causes of serious collisions in Ontario, and the consequences for victims can be devastating: broken bones, traumatic brain injuries, chronic pain, lost income, and a long, uncertain road to recovery—sometimes to a life that will never be the same as it was before.
If you've been hurt in a collision caused by a distracted driver, you're probably overwhelmed. Insurance adjusters are calling. Bills are piling up. And you may feel small against a system that seems designed to minimize what happened to you. You don't have to face that system alone. A distracted driving accident lawyer can level the playing field by gathering evidence, proving fault, and fighting for the full compensation you need to rebuild your life.
At Strype Injury Lawyers, we've spent over 46 years in Ontario's courts advocating for victims of negligence. We know how distracted driving cases work, what insurers look for, and how to make sure the evidence tells the truth about what really happened. Here's what you need to know.
Key Takeaways
Distracted driving is the act of operating a motor vehicle while engaged in any secondary activity that takes attention away from the primary task of driving. That could mean removing your eyes from the road to look at your phone, taking your hands off the steering wheel to grab your Tim Horton’s coffee and take a bite of your honey cruler, or your mind not being focused on driving because you’re too tired. Under Ontario's Highway Traffic Act, distracted driving also includes using a hand-held device, texting, viewing unrelated display screens, and programming a GPS while the vehicle is in motion.
Before examining the legal consequences, it's important to understand the scale of the problem. The statistics speak for themselves:
These aren't abstract numbers. Behind every statistic is a real person who was struck by a driver who made the choice, even if it was only for a moment, to look away. That choice has real legal consequences, and so does the harm it causes to innocent people on Ontario's roads.
Researchers and traffic safety experts categorize distracted driving into three distinct types. Understanding these categories matters in a legal context because they affect how liability is established:
Many distracted driving incidents involve all three types simultaneously. Texting while driving, for instance, is manual, visual, and cognitive all at once, which is why research consistently shows it to be among the most dangerous behaviours behind the wheel. A 2024 survey also revealed that most Ontarians view distracted driving as a bigger threat to road safety compared to impaired driving.
In Ontario, distracted driving contributes to approximately 17% of reported, non-fatal crashes and accounts for roughly 15% of all road fatalities in the province. According to the Ontario Provincial Police (OPP), distracted driving has, in recent years, surpassed impaired driving as the number one cause of fatal collisions on provincial roads—and 2024 national data indicates that distracted driving now accounts for over 20% of fatal collisions in Canada, with rates continuing to trend upward.
Fatal accidents involving distraction have doubled since 2000. That's not a coincidence, rather it's the direct result of the explosion in smartphone use and the normalization of multi-tasking behind the wheel. Ontario roads are safer in many ways than they were decades ago, but distracted driving remains a stubborn exception to that trend.
Ontario's legal framework for distracted driving operates on two tracks that are directly relevant to injury victims.
Understanding both tracks, and how they work together, is essential if you've been hurt in a collision caused by an inattentive driver.
Under Section 78(1) of the Highway Traffic Act, it is illegal to hold or use a hand-held wireless communication device, view non-driving-related display screens, or program a GPS by hand while operating a motor vehicle—even when stopped at a red light. The law applies to all drivers, including novice drivers on G1, G2, M1, and M2 licences.
|
Offence |
Fine |
Demerit Points |
Suspension |
Notes |
|
1st Conviction |
$615–$1,000 |
3 points |
3 days |
|
|
2nd Conviction |
Up to $2,000 |
6 points |
7 days |
|
|
3rd+ Conviction |
Up to $3,000 |
6 points |
30 days |
|
|
Novice (G1/G2) 1st |
Same as above |
No points |
30 days |
May lose licence on 3rd |
Beyond these base penalties, a distracted driver who causes a collision may also face careless driving charges under the Highway Traffic Act or, in severe cases, criminal dangerous driving charges under the Criminal Code of Canada. Careless driving causing bodily harm or death carries the possibility of imprisonment. These escalating charges are directly relevant to your civil claim: a finding of careless or dangerous driving by a court significantly strengthens the negligence case your lawyer builds on your behalf.
A distracted driving conviction in Ontario is classified as a major driving infraction. Insurers treat it similarly to impaired driving convictions when assessing risk, which means your premiums can increase dramatically, often by 25% or more at renewal, and some carriers will non-renew your policy outright.
From a victim's perspective, when you pursue a tort claim against a distracted driver, their driving record and insurance history can be relevant to establishing fault and negotiating your settlement. A driver with a prior distracted driving conviction or a pattern of risky behaviour presents stronger evidence of negligence. In some cases, a prior conviction can also support a claim for aggravated damages, particularly where an insurer's conduct has been unreasonable.
It's also worth noting that Ontario's insurance system requires your own insurer to pay your accident benefits (SABS) regardless of who was at fault—but collecting full compensation for your injuries, lost income, and suffering from the at-fault driver requires a separate tort claim. This is exactly why having a lawyer matters.
If you drive in Ontario, this section may be the most important thing you read this year.
As of July 1, 2026, the Ontario government's changes to the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule (SABS) will take effect. Under these reforms, two benefits that were previously mandatory for all Ontario auto insurance policies will become optional add-ons:
If you don't specifically purchase these optional benefits before a collision occurs, you may not be entitled to them regardless of how seriously you're injured or how disrupted your life becomes. For commuters and working Ontarians who depend on their income, the stakes of this reform are enormous.
Check your insurance policy now. Call your broker or insurance company directly and ask, "Do my current benefits include income replacement and caregiver support?" If they're not explicitly included, talk to them about adding these benefits before the July 1, 2026 deadline. Don't wait until after a collision to find out what you don't have.
Hiring a distracted driving accident lawyer gives you the investigative resources, legal expertise, and courtroom credibility to go up against an insurance system that is built to minimize your claim. A lawyer can subpoena cell phone records, retain accident reconstruction experts, navigate the SABS benefits process, and build a tort claim against the at-fault driver—all while you focus on recovering.
Not all personal injury firms are built the same. High-volume settlement mills process hundreds of files simultaneously, often settling quickly and quietly to keep the pipeline moving. The problem with quick settlements is that they're rarely full settlements, especially in cases involving serious injuries with long-term consequences.
At Strype Injury Lawyers, we're the firm other lawyers refer their most complex files to when they don't have the resources to litigate. With over 250 trials to our name and 46 years of experience in Ontario courts, we don't settle because it's convenient—we settle when the number is right. And if it isn't right, we go to trial. That reputation alone changes how insurers respond to our clients' claims.
One of the biggest challenges in distracted driving claims is actually proving distraction. The at-fault driver isn't going to admit to texting. That's where the technical evidence comes in, and where having the right legal team makes all the difference. Here's what we pursue:
|
Evidence Type |
What It Is |
Why It Matters |
|
Cell Phone Records |
Subpoenaed wireless carrier records including call logs, text timestamps, and data usage |
Places a phone in active use at the precise moment of the collision |
|
Camera and Dashcam Footage |
Intersection camera footage, dashcams from your vehicle or nearby traffic, and business surveillance |
Can visually confirm a driver was looking at a device at the moment of impact |
|
Witness Testimony |
Accounts from passengers in other vehicles, pedestrians, and bystanders who observed the driver before the crash |
Powerful corroborating evidence that supports physical and digital findings |
|
Accident Reconstruction |
Specialists who analyze collision physics, braking patterns, and impact angles |
Determines whether the driver's reaction time is consistent with distraction — decisive at trial or in settlement negotiations |
Evidence can disappear quickly. Surveillance footage can get overwritten, and phone records can become harder to access the more time that passes. That's why it's critical to contact a distracted driving accident lawyer as soon as possible after a collision. Because the earlier we can act, the stronger the case we can build.
Whether you're a daily commuter on the 401 or a parent driving your child to school everyday, building better habits behind the wheel protects everyone. Here are practical, evidence-backed strategies for Ontario drivers:
A collision caused by a distracted driver doesn't just injure your body, it disrupts your income, your independence, and your sense of safety on the road. You weren't careless. You were simply in the wrong place when someone made the wrong choice. You deserve more than a quick settlement that undervalues your situation and leaves you without the resources to cover long-term care, rehabilitation, or lost earning capacity.
The right legal team will investigate the collision, preserve critical evidence, retain the experts needed to prove fault, and fight for the full compensation you're entitled to under Ontario law, including income replacement, attendant care, pain and suffering damages, and future care costs if your injuries are serious.
At Strype Injury Lawyers, we've been doing exactly that for over four decades. We've stood in more than 250 courtrooms across Ontario. We've taken on the biggest insurers in the country and refused to back down. We work on a contingency fee basis, which means if we don’t win, you don’t pay, and we fund your expert costs upfront so you never have to fight with one hand tied behind your back.
If you or someone you love has been injured by a distracted driver in Ontario, don't talk to the insurance company before you talk to us.
Don't talk to them. Talk to us.
Contact Strype Injury Lawyers today for a free, no-pressure case evaluation. There's no obligation—just the answers you need to make the right decision for yourself and your family.
Legal Disclaimer: The information in this article is intended for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Every personal injury claim is unique, and the facts of your situation may affect your legal rights and options. If you have been injured or believe you may have a legal claim, contact a qualified personal injury lawyer in Ontario as soon as possible.