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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.

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Pictures courtesy of Daily Mail

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17 July 2026

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riverhigh Silver Member

riverhigh

Advanced Member
31 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?

Good question, That raises an important question what kind of business was he developing suring the past 12 years. Of course that detail along with his insurance coverage and police report were conveniently left out. But he did tell us that he never wanted to be that foreigner begging for money but he he swallowed his pride.

Rockyroad Platinum Member

Rockyroad

Advanced Member
9 minutes ago, Gottfrid said:

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.

Sad story. Driving is a real pleasure.

Front Row Silver Member

Front Row

Advanced Member
15 minutes ago, wmorris61 said:

A safe following distance is something that is rarely practiced in Thailand. I do it all the time but then have to put up with everyone cutting into the space.

Leave a gap and someone immediately takes it. Many drivers here lack road sense and have zero awareness of their surroundings resulting in accidents like this. I don't know if it's first generation drivers syndrome or what but it needs to change

You can’t leave any kind of gap when driving on the busy highways. Leave more than one car length and someone will surely go around you and cut in. Heck, some drivers will cut in if there’s 3/4 of a car length gap! Which is why driving here is so stressful. You have to anticipate the actions of four to six cars that are in front of, beside, and behind you.

And since this was initially about motorcycles, who among us doesn’t love the big bikes that squeeze between two lanes of cars, everyone going 80 to 120 kph. If I see them coming, I’ll help them out. But if they roar right up to me and I haven’t seen them coming, they’re on their own.

spidermike007 Star Member

spidermike007

Advanced Member
1 hour ago, spidermike007 said:

A good friend of mine got in a bad motorcycle accident some time ago. He almost lost his leg. He got his first of 11 operations at Bangkok Hospital Samui. It costs him over a million baht. They wanted to do a second procedure. They quoted him 1.4 million baht. He decided to transfer to Bangkok. He was quoted 460,000 baht for the same procedure, at a top private hospital there. The surgeon told him that he worked at a public hospital too, and could do the same operation there, for alot less money. He told him he would get him a quote.

In the interim, my friend called a buddy in San Diego, who is an orthopedic surgeon. Since my friend was a retired chiropractor, he knew all the terminology, and explained what he needed, and asked for the best price. His friend called him back, and quoted him $960,000, with cash discounts! And that was 15 years ago! The local surgeon got back to him, and told him he could do it for 46,000 baht. He transferred, and they did all the rest of his procedures.

So, 1.4 million at Bangkok Hospital, 460,000 at the other private hospital in Bangkok (I think it was Vejthani Hospital), and 46,000 at the public hospital, with an excellent surgeon. VS. 32,000,000 baht in the US. Again, no complaints from this peanut gallery.

Fascinating how @PhilipHabib does not like the idea of someone saving a fortune on medical bills. Huh.

Screaming Gold Member

Screaming

Advanced Member

Thailand has one of the world's highest road-traffic fatality rates, with about 70 people dying daily from road accidents, and 74% of those fatalities involve motorbike riders and passengers. Only a fool gets on a motorbike in Thailand no matter how great a rider you are.

Scouse123 Ruby Member

Scouse123

Advanced Member

Go fund yourself.

If you've been here so many years, you know the risks.

Business consultant, my ar$e

Your insurance at your age would have been very affordable, and here we go now, begging strangers for your errors of judgement in not prioritising your health.

Scouse123 Ruby Member

Scouse123

Advanced Member
2 hours 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

Nobody will learn from this, as it always happens to somebody else.

One thing we do know: GoFundMe will always be the port of call for those too irresponsible to seek proper insurance.

Gottfrid Star Member

Gottfrid

Advanced Member
44 minutes ago, Rockyroad said:

Sad story. Driving is a real pleasure.

Yeah, it is. Actually, really relaxing. However, people react different, and I guess that choice was right for him. A little bit sad for me and my sister too, as we only got to use public transport until 15 years of age, when it was time for motorbike. Mother never had a license in her life. 😂

Trip Hop Advanced Member

Trip Hop

Member
(edited)
1 hour ago, LennyW said:

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.

In the grand scale of speed, no it's not that fast. Personally I've ridden at 2.5x that and generally cruise at 135-140kph when on a motorway to minimise time sitting alongside other vehicles where you might get side-swiped. However, here it was obviously too fast for the conditions and the capability of the rider, regardless whether in town or on a highway.

Edited by Trip Hop

GammaGlobulin Star Member

GammaGlobulin

Advanced Member

Absolutely horrific thing to happen.

When will Thailand ban motorbikes and motorcycles?

Soon, we hope.

Scouse123 Ruby Member

Scouse123

Advanced Member
3 hours ago, Paul Henry said:

What is the situation with legal liability? Can the driver of the vehicle doing the uturn be sued for compensation, does the driver have insurance for third party? What is the minimum insurance requirements to licence a car in Thailand?

Do you think the other driver will be insured?

Are you a paid up member of the Thai optimist society?

Front Row Silver Member

Front Row

Advanced Member
4 minutes ago, GammaGlobulin said:

Absolutely horrific thing to happen.

When will Thailand ban motorbikes and motorcycles?

Soon, we hope.

Probably will happen organically when (if) the standard of living rises to the point where every family can afford to own automobiles.

Blueman1 Silver Member

Blueman1

Advanced Member
4 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.

4 hours ago, save the frogs said:

And that seems like a high speed to me,....Really, It's Only about 62 mph....

Blueman1 Silver Member

Blueman1

Advanced Member
3 hours ago, mikebell said:

Nowhere in the article or comments did I see the word Insurance. (Damn Ivor just beat me!) Can you buy or rent a motor bike without it?

Yeah, You almost certainly can !!

khunPer Diamond Member

khunPer

Advanced Member

Too many goFundMe...whistling

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