The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
Insurancegentle-swift-433

Adjuster called 4 days after crash and offered next to nothing — do I just take it?

Still kind of in shock honestly. Last week I was stopped at a red light and got slammed from behind by someone who clearly wasn't paying attention. My son was in the passenger seat. Neither of our airbags went off but my bumper was pretty mangled.

We both felt okay at first — adrenaline I guess — but by that evening we were stiff and sore all over. Neck, upper back, shoulders. We ended up going to an urgent care the next morning. They did X-rays, ruled out fractures, and told us we both had whiplash-type injuries. They gave us some anti-inflammatories and said to follow up with our regular doctors.

Here's where I'm frustrated: the at-fault driver's insurance company called me four days after the accident. Super friendly adjuster, very casual. She made it sound like she was just checking in. Then at the end of the call she offered me a settlement — a small lump sum for each of us, and she said I had something like three weeks to submit any additional medical bills.

I haven't even seen my regular doctor yet. My son is still having headaches and says his neck hurts when he turns to look over his shoulder. I missed almost two days of work. And my son — who just got his permit — says he doesn't even want to practice driving anymore, he's been so anxious since it happened.

Is what they offered even remotely fair? It feels way too fast. I don't know if I should just take it and move on or if I'm about to make a huge mistake. Has anyone been through something like this?

15replies

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15 replies

  • 20
    plain-grouse-311

    Please do not take that offer. I cannot stress this enough. They're calling you that fast because they want to close the file before you actually know how hurt you are. That 'window to submit medical bills' thing is a pressure tactic — once you settle, it's over. You can't go back and ask for more if your son's neck turns out to need physical therapy for months.

    • 13
      bold-kestrel-565

      I used to work in claims and I'll be straight with you: the speed of that call is not coincidence. Adjusters are trained to reach out early, sound warm, and float a number before you've had time to talk to anyone else. That offer is almost certainly a fraction of what the claim is actually worth, especially with two people injured and ongoing symptoms. The 'limited window for medical bills' framing is designed to create urgency. You're not obligated to respond to that deadline the way they're implying.

    • 6
      gentle-traveler535

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 11
    humble-mole-163

    From a medical standpoint, four days is way too early to know the full picture with whiplash injuries. Symptoms often evolve over the first two to three weeks. Headaches after a rear-end collision can sometimes signal things that don't show up on a standard X-ray. Please get your son seen by your regular doctor and make sure everything is documented properly before you even think about settling.

    • 11
      calm-bison-604

      The part about your son not wanting to drive anymore really got me. That's real emotional distress, and it matters. Don't let them minimize what both of you went through just because the bones aren't broken. Take care of yourselves first.

    • 1
      grounded-sidewalk786

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 15
    swift-mole-577

    I went through almost the exact same thing two years ago. Got rear-ended, felt 'okay-ish' at first, accepted a quick offer because I thought I was mostly fine. Six weeks later I was in physical therapy twice a week and completely out of pocket. I genuinely wish I had waited. You deserve to know the full cost of your recovery first.

    • 8
      wise-owl-676

      A few things worth knowing: (1) You are not required to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. (2) Signing a release ends your claim — full stop. (3) The timeline they gave you for submitting medical bills is their internal preference, not a legal deadline you're bound by. Get both of you fully evaluated, collect all your documentation — medical records, bills, any notes about missed work — before you make any decisions.

    • 10
      quiet-optimist946

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 21
    clever-elk-899

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: a settlement offer made before treatment is complete and before you understand the full extent of your injuries is almost never in the claimant's best interest. Most personal injury attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency, so there's usually no cost to at least getting an informed opinion on what your claim might actually be worth. The call you got is a classic early-contact strategy.

    • 8
      hearty-fox-319

      Don't sign anything. See your doctors first, get everything in writing, and at minimum talk to a PI attorney before you respond to that adjuster. One phone call with a lawyer costs you nothing and could save you from a decision you'll regret for a long time.

    • 10
      kind-rider629

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 6
    cool-newt-156

    Out of curiosity — did they ask you to sign a release along with that offer, or just verbally quote you a number? And did you get the other driver's insurance info in writing at the scene? Just want to make sure you actually have a clean claim to work with before assuming the offer is negotiable.

    • 0
      quiet-rider212

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

    • 5
      mellow-late-shift496

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.