A Colorado homeowner says a mapping error by a major navigation app turned his private driveway into an unofficial route for tourists. The situation reportedly escalated when a tourist allegedly drove down the driveway at night, ignored posted warnings, and crashed an SUV into a concrete retaining wall.
The claim appeared in a viral post shared by Reddit user Tralique_24 in the r/legal forum. The poster wrote that the app incorrectly identified his long private driveway as a public shortcut to a nearby national park entrance. This happened about eight months ago, they said.
According to the post, the change resulted in frequent traffic through his property. This happened despite multiple warning signs and repeated attempts to report the issue to the company.
Lawsuit says driveway should be marked as ‘public thoroughfare’
According to the Reddit post, the driver who hit the retaining wall suffered a broken leg and totaled the vehicle. According to the homeowner, a lawsuit now accuses him of failing to maintain a “public thoroughfare.” He’s also accused of failing to mark the retaining wall as a hazard.
The homeowner alleged that he submitted more than 40 error reports. He sent certified letters to the company’s legal department and filed a police report. He claimed the company never corrected the routing information. The post did not identify the mapping service by name, though commenters frequently referenced Google Maps.
While the specific allegations remain unconfirmed, other navigation app routing disputes have emerged in recent years. In 2023, the family of North Carolina resident Philip Paxson sued Google, alleging that Google Maps directed him onto a collapsed bridge. People had reportedly alerted the company to the bridge’s condition years earlier.
Paxson died after driving off the bridge while following navigation directions, according to the Associated Press. Google said at the time that it was reviewing the lawsuit.
Similar routing problems have affected private property owners elsewhere. In Australia, residents near the Blue Mountains National Park reported that Google Maps mistakenly directed tourists to a residential dead-end street. This prompted locals to install signs warning visitors that the app’s directions were incorrect.
One Reddit commenter on Tralique_24’s post recalled following Google Maps directions to a trailhead in a mountainous area. They said they encountered a sign warning that the app’s route was incorrect and did not provide access to the destination.
The commenter added they turned around after reading the notice, but watched several other drivers stop, check both the sign and their phones, then continue down the road anyway. Based on that experience, the commenter suggested that warning signs alone may not be enough to deter drivers and that a physical barrier could be more effective.
The Colorado incident described in this article is based on an unverified Reddit post and comments. The allegations have not been independently confirmed. The views expressed are those of the poster and commenters and do not constitute established facts.
Published: Jun 25, 2026 04:30 pm