Skip to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Thailand News and Discussion Forum | ASEANNOW

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Brit's leg left 'hanging off' in Thailand crash

British expat Darren Cummins, 34, is facing GBP22,000 in hospital bills after a motorbike crash in Thailand left him with severe leg injuries, including the loss of five inches of tibia bone.

Cummins, originally from Falkirk, Scotland, moved to Thailand in 2015 after first visiting on holiday. The business development consultant said the crash on 13 June has turned his and his girlfriend's lives "upside down", with three operations still needed before rehabilitation.

Collision on a triple carriageway

Cummins said he was travelling at 100kph when a car allegedly made a U-turn across oncoming traffic on a triple carriageway.

"The driver was travelling in the opposite direction to me so he was on the other side of the triple carriageway and he wanted to do a U-turn," he said.

He said the driver crossed all three lanes and may have believed he could clear two vehicles ahead of Cummins. However, Cummins said he did not see the car until it had passed the second vehicle in the middle lane and was about a metre in front of him.

collage_export_E7171425-B9AF-4AA6-8004-B99E475731E4.jpeg

He said it was impossible to avoid the impact. "My leg took the brunt of the impact but had that been any other part of my body, whether it was my chest or my head, then I wouldn't be here right now."

Cummins said he was thrown about 30 yards from his motorbike, was in and out of consciousness and went into shock. He recalled seeing his "leg just dangling off" and screaming uncontrollably before waking in hospital with an oxygen mask on.

Long recovery and mounting costs

The crash caused a compound fracture at the top of his tibia, with five inches of bone lost. He also suffered comminuted fractures to his ankle and shin and lost the use of his Achilles tendon.

"I lost five inches of tibia, smashed out of my knee, [it] scattered across the road," he said. "I'm lucky to be here."

Cummins, who describes himself as a "motorbike guy" and regularly rode to see Thailand's "beauty", said it is less than likely he will ever walk properly again, though there remains a small chance. He said he has cried himself to sleep over the prospect and doubts he will be able to ride again.

For foreign residents and visitors, his account underlines the potentially substantial upfront costs of serious treatment after a road crash. Cummins said the hospital that accepted his case had already exceeded its initial estimate of about GBP15,000.

"Every single procedure now we get hounded for money before they work on me - even if it's an emergency you have to have the money," he said.

After exhausting his savings, Cummins set up a GoFundMe fundraiser, saying he had never wanted to become "that foreigner in Thailand" asking for help but had swallowed his pride.

image.png

Pictures courtesy of Daily Mail

Join the discussion? Create account. orange.png


image.png

17 July 2026

User Feedback

Recommended Comments

shackleton Platinum Member

shackleton

Advanced Member

How many articles do we read with people involved in motor bike incidents

And coming off worse injuries hospital bills ect

I would have thought as a expat in Thailand he would have known better

Insurance needed and so on to pay for any hospital bills ect

Or even better don't ride bikes in Thailand to dangerous

Wish him well hopefully other motor bike people will learn from this guys experience

riverhigh Silver Member

riverhigh

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, Celsius said:

All these fancy titles, but still gofundme.

The business development consultant .... I was rolling in laughter when I read that statement. No more of a business consultant than I was a former nuclear scientist graduated from MIT. So we are suppose to believe that this narcissistic youth driving at high speeds was cut down in the prime of his promising bsiness career by a reckless driver makeing a u-turn. As already pointed out where is the insurance, where is the police report ..........

Captain Flack Star Member

Captain Flack

Global Moderator

Post breaking forum rules removed.

@newbee2022 rule 17.News articles are collected from recognised sources and may be consolidated or rewritten with AI assistance. Respectful discussion of the article content is welcome. Disrespectful comments about the articles, the use of AI, or the news team (e.g. “clickbait,” “slow news day,” mocking grammar, or AI taunts) are not permitted. Posts breaching this rule will be removed, and posting suspension or account closure may result.

bannork Star Member

bannork

Newsman

Driving at motorbike at 100kph is insane in Thailand.

There could be anything on the road: strewn sugarcane, empty sacks blowing across the road, tractors crossing, dogs meandering looking for bird carcasses.

I'm sorry but his actions were reckless.

rughead Explorer Member

rughead

Member

Another ? story , long time foreign resident of thailand on ? visa , with no medical insurance . Now asking for financial help . !!!!!

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
36 minutes ago, shackleton said:

How many articles do we read with people involved in motor bike incidents

And coming off worse injuries hospital bills ect

I would have thought as a expat in Thailand he would have known better

Insurance needed and so on to pay for any hospital bills ect

Or even better don't ride bikes in Thailand to dangerous

Wish him well hopefully other motor bike people will learn from this guys experience

Daily murders and crashes. Some people are just crazy.

Rimmer Star Member

Rimmer

Admin

Many years ago in England when I used to ride motorbikes I was hospitalized at St Margaret Hospital in Epping after an accident, the lad in the next bed to me had a similar accident to the man in the article, he broke and lost a good part of his femur bone, The surgeons at were able to make a cofferdam and fill it with bone chips from his hip, after many months he was able to walk but his leg was maybe two inches shorter.

LennyW Ruby Member

LennyW

Advanced Member

100km/hr is not that fast, just sounds like a big number, it's only 62 mph, no mention in the post if this was in town or on a highway.

BritManToo Star Member

BritManToo

Advanced Member
(edited)
38 minutes ago, spidermike007 said:

The only time I've seen money successfully recovered in Thailand from an automobile accident when someone else was at fault is when you have a good insurance company that goes after the responsible party.

Doing it on your own would likely cost a fortune, it would likely take years, and who knows what the result would be?

Nope,

Hit and run got me, police caught him and charged him.

His 1st class insurance refused to pay damages as they claimed it was deliberate. But his insurance did pay my hospital bill and m/c repairs as an 'act of good will'.

Police arrested him, public prosecuter tried him, and a judge awarded enough money to buy a car. Only cost to me was 2x 1,000bht for official interpreter at the police station, no fortune spent, but it did take around 18 months from start to finish.

My wife only reported the hit and run in order to get a police report to claim gov min accident payment for the hospital. Police and court chased it all the way, I was surprised!

Edited by BritManToo

MeRakThai Apprentice Member

MeRakThai

Member
31 minutes ago, riverhigh said:

The business development consultant .... I was rolling in laughter when I read that statement. No more of a business consultant than I was a former nuclear scientist graduated from MIT. So we are suppose to believe that this narcissistic youth driving at high speeds was cut down in the prime of his promising bsiness career by a reckless driver makeing a u-turn. As already pointed out where is the insurance, where is the police report ..........

He came to thailand at age 22 and is a business development manager???To young for a retirement visa, no wife just a girlfriend so no marriage visa....can someone more learned than me tell me how he could have stayed so long on what visa?

visalady Senior Member

visalady

Member

Riding bikes here is like playing Russian roulette, no matter how experinced and careful you are. 50 deaths a day on Thai roads and mostly bikes. You just cannot always account for the stupidity and danger from other road users here. It's one of the most dangerous things anyone can do, good business for go fund me though.

KhunLA Star Member

KhunLA

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, MeRakThai said:

He came to thailand at age 22 and is a business development manager???To young for a retirement visa, no wife just a girlfriend so no marriage visa....can someone more learned than me tell me how he could have stayed so long on what visa?

Non-Immigrant B Visa would allow that.

save the frogs Star Member

save the frogs

Advanced Member
(edited)
1 hour ago, TedG said:

That's not all that fast. I'll get my BMW over 120 Kph on the US highways. You need to look ahead and always keep a safe following distance from other vehicles.

Sorry, I'm not convinced it's possible to be entirely safe on a motorcycle.

Even if you are the best driver in the world, other drivers in cars are not and the roads are unpredictable.

I saw a guy on Youtube talking about how he stopped riding his motorcycle for years, but then started up again. He knows he's risking his life, but he made a conscious decision to live with that risk rather than avoid the thrill of riding.

Edited by save the frogs

Front Row Silver Member

Front Row

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, TedG said:

That's not all that fast. I'll get my BMW over 120 Kph on the US highways. You need to look ahead and always keep a safe following distance from other vehicles.

FWIW if you are going 120 kph in the USA then you are almost certainly going over the speed limit. 70 mph / 112 kph is the absolute maximum speed limit on American highways. (There may be a few rare exceptions.)

Of course everyone else on the highway is probably going 80 mph too. 😝

Gottfrid Star Member

Gottfrid

Advanced Member
2 hours ago, save the frogs said:

I'm not a big fan of motorbikes.

And that seems like a high speed to me, although probably common for motorcyclists.

2 hours ago, BritManToo said:

Poor guy, what a thing to happen, it's the danger of riding a scooter/motorcycle though, and he was going a bit fast for Thai roads.

The thing here is that is you know how to drive a motorbike; you will drive at the speed of traffic or a bit faster to get around things. So, 100km is not really any high speed, if it´s a regular motorway and not inside city.

Besides that, an experienced driver, as him, due to that he calls himself a motorbike guy, would or should be able to see much better and anticipate things in front of him. he was just unconcentrated on the road. Driving in Thailand, takes a little bit more out of even experienced drivers. It´s definitely not the easiest country to drive in.

Hopefully the guy will sort it out and recover, but he should really go get some good driving lessons before riding again.

TedG Ruby Member

TedG

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, Front Row said:

FWIW if you are going 120 kph in the USA then you are almost certainly going over the speed limit. 70 mph / 112 kph is the absolute maximum speed limit on American highways. (There may be a few rare exceptions.)

Of course everyone else on the highway is probably going 80 mph too. 😝

You either go with the flow, or get stuck the slow lane. Especially on I95 and I81.

Priorexpat Silver Member

Priorexpat

Advanced Member

The faster you go, the faster everything happens. Had he been doing 75, could he have seen what was up and avoided it? I say yes.

I spent 11 years on a moto in Thailand, slow down, look way in front, check your rear mirrors.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, save the frogs said:

Sorry, I'm not convinced it's possible to be entirely safe on a motorcycle.

Even if you are the best driver in the world, other drivers in cars are not and the roads are unpredictable.

I saw a guy on Youtube talking about how he stopped riding his motorcycle for years, but then started up again. He knows he's risking his life, but he made a conscious decision to live with that risk rather than avoid the thrill of riding.

Depends on location. Places like pkk, ban krut, pranburi, lanta have low traffic and if you ride at 50kph the risk of injury is low. I ride scooters a lot and normally stick to 50kph.

Big bike riders are all ego and going 100+ is normal for them but death risk is 29x higher on bikes than cars.

Tolle would say they have unresolved issues.

GmailJen Explorer Member

GmailJen

Member

Unfortunately this type of accident is on the increase and will happen again and again since the roads are basically a lawless racecourse ! Whilst signs may show 60 or 80 or whatever , city speed limits ? , there is no enforcement of speed limits , no speed cameras , hardly any traffic police (apart from those escorting buses and VIP groups) . City wide speed limits just don't seem to exist ! Witness any day , especially at rush hour , the crazy speed of cars/pickups ( many modified to llok sporty and noisy ) plus motorbikes zooming down Sukhumvit at 100 / 120 k hr or more in the middle of Pattaya ! I see about 20% of motorbilke wearers with helmets .

Does Thailand really bel;ieve it is of the same standard as OECD or developed countries with such lawlessness on the roads which leads to such needless deaths and accidents ?

I have always maintained it basically comes down to the issue of Insurance ! It will never change whilst the issue of insurance is in government hands ( ie issued by DLT for a pittance , virtually no background checks , allows dangerously modified vehicles to be driven by anyone ). It's not worth the paper it's written on apart from filling the governments coffers !

TedG Ruby Member

TedG

Advanced Member
5 minutes ago, save the frogs said:

Sorry, I'm not convinced it's possible to be entirely safe on a motorcycle.

Even if you are the best driver in the world, other drivers in cars are not and the roads are unpredictable.

I saw a guy on Youtube talking about how he stopped riding his motorcycle for years, but then started up again. He knows he's risking his life, but he made a conscious decision to live with that risk rather than avoid the thrill of riding.

I can see your point, riding not as safe as being in a car. When riding, one has to be supper aware of traffic in front and traffic behind you. I've only been on scooters in Thailand, and people drive like hell in Thailand.

BritManToo Star Member

BritManToo

Advanced Member
8 minutes ago, Gottfrid said:

Besides that, an experienced driver, as him, due to that he calls himself a motorbike guy, would or should be able to see much better and anticipate things in front of him. he was just unconcentrated on the road. Driving in Thailand, takes a little bit more out of even experienced drivers. It´s definitely not the easiest country to drive in.

I rarely exceed 60kph, driving a car or m/c.

Don't trust the Thai roads or the Thai drivers to go faster.

Maybe you're a better driver than me.

save the frogs Star Member

save the frogs

Advanced Member
10 minutes ago, Gottfrid said:

Hopefully the guy will sort it out and recover, but he should really go get some good driving lessons before riding again.

Or hang up his helmet and get a car or use Bolt.

Gottfrid Star Member

Gottfrid

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, save the frogs said:

Or hang up his helmet and get a car or use Bolt.

Can´t ask him to be that sensible! 😂

Front Row Silver Member

Front Row

Advanced Member

He’s lived here for years? Full time?

The guy should have known the risks of riding a motorcycle in Thailand.

The guy should have known the importance of good car and bike insurance.

The guy should have also known that he should have had his own medical insurance, on top of bike insurance.

And now, after the fact, he should try to go after the driver that did the illegal u-turn.

I feel sorry for him but he should have been smart enough to protect himself against accidents and other (usually bad) drivers.

Gottfrid Star Member

Gottfrid

Advanced Member
3 minutes ago, BritManToo said:

I rarely exceed 60kph, driving a car or m/c.

Don't trust the Thai roads or the Thai drivers to go faster.

Maybe you're a better driver than me.

I understand you. It´s even many Thai´s that do like you. I don´t think it´s about being a good or better driver. I am pretty sure you can drive, and that you would be more secure on British roads. I feel the same, but it´s just that I have found that following the speed or a bit more, does the thing for me. Here it was also about motorbike, and there it´s just a fact that it goes better if you, as an experienced driver, go around and overtake cars, as one usually don´t want them right in front of the bike. That´s kind of more dangerous, as they often brake hard and sudden.

save the frogs Star Member

save the frogs

Advanced Member
4 minutes ago, Gottfrid said:

Can´t ask him to be that sensible! 😂

I even met a guy back home who was afraid to drive cars after nearly getting into an accident.

He stopped driving and just used public transit.

Gottfrid Star Member

Gottfrid

Advanced Member
Just now, save the frogs said:

I even met a guy back home who was afraid to drive cars after nearly getting into an accident.

He stopped driving and just used public transit.

Yeah, sounds like my father. He had an accident when he was around 35 years old. Not any big stuff, just got hit and run out on a field. However, he got so spoked out of that, he never drove again for the rest of his life.

Create an account or sign in to comment

Account

Navigation

Search

Search

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.