A Coca-Cola delivery truck was left badly damaged after a collision with a white SUV at a busy Sydney intersection, with dashcam footage showing the truckâs cab dropping from the vehicle while the driver was still inside.
The crash happened around 11.45am on Monday at the intersection of King Street and Botany Road in Mascot. The incident involved a red Coca-Cola truck and a white 4WD, and despite the frightening impact, the truck driver escaped with only minor injuries.
Police and paramedics attended the scene after the collision. The 29-year-old truck driver was treated by paramedics and taken to hospital as a precaution. The people inside the SUV were not injured.
Sydney motorists gasped in horror as a Coca-Cola delivery truck and an SUV collided, sending the truck skidding down the road with its cab off.
— The Daily Telegraph (@dailytelegraph) June 24, 2026
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What the dashcam footage showed
The video from Dashcam Australia showed the Coca-Cola truck moving through the intersection on a green light. As the truck continued forward, the white SUV entered the middle of the road while attempting to make a right turn.
A horn could be heard just before the vehicles collided. Seconds later, the truck and SUV crashed, sending the truck sliding ahead as the front cab separated from the main body of the vehicle.
One nearby driver reacted in shock as the crash unfolded, while other motorists could be heard gasping at the force of the collision. Another truck travelling nearby also had to brake hard as it passed close to the damaged Coca-Cola vehicle before stopping.
Why this crash stood out
Many intersection crashes cause major panel damage, but this incident drew attention because of what happened to the truck itself. The cab did not simply crumple at the front; it dropped away while the driver was still inside.
That detail made the footage especially alarming. A truck cab is where the driver sits, controls the vehicle and absorbs the first visible shock of a frontal or angled impact. Seeing it separate during a city crash gives viewers a clearer sense of how much force was involved.
The white SUV was also badly damaged in the crash, but the fact that its occupants were not injured makes the outcome unusually fortunate for everyone involved.
How the crash unfolded at the intersection
The early sequence appears to show three key moments: the truck approaching and entering the intersection, the SUV moving forward to turn right, and the impact occurring in the middle of the road.
Right-turn crashes can become dangerous quickly because one vehicle is often crossing the path of another. When the oncoming vehicle is a heavy truck, the risk increases because trucks need more distance to stop and cannot change direction as quickly as smaller vehicles.
Mascot is also a high-traffic part of Sydney, with commercial vehicles, airport-related traffic, local drivers and delivery routes sharing the same road network. In that kind of environment, a short delay in judging speed or space can have serious consequences.
What drivers can learn from the Mascot crash
The crash is a reminder that a green light does not remove every hazard at an intersection. Drivers still need to watch for vehicles turning across traffic, unexpected movement from nearby lanes and heavy vehicles that may not be able to stop suddenly.
For motorists making a right turn, the safest approach is to wait until there is a clear gap and enough time to complete the turn without forcing an oncoming driver to brake hard. For drivers approaching an intersection, scanning ahead remains important even when they have the signal in their favour.
Drivers approaching intersections should remain alert even when travelling on a green signal. Maintaining full control of a vehicle is critical in unexpected situations, which is why topics such as driving barefoot in Australia continue to attract attention among motorists and road-safety observers.
Heavy vehicles also behave differently from cars. Their weight affects braking distance, turning response and impact force. Guidance on heavy vehicle safety and road responsibilities is available from Australiaâs National Heavy Vehicle Regulator.
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Why the driverâs escape matters
The most striking part of the Mascot crash is not just the damage, but the outcome. The truck cab fell away with the driver inside, yet police said he suffered only minor injuries and was taken to hospital as a precaution.
That does not make the crash minor. It shows how quickly a normal weekday drive can turn into a serious emergency, especially at a busy intersection where a heavy vehicle and an SUV meet at speed.
Authorities are expected to review the circumstances of the crash, including the dashcam footage and witness accounts. For now, the incident stands as a dramatic example of how intersection decisions, heavy vehicle movement and split-second timing can combine to create a crash that looks far worse than its injury toll.














