The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
Insurancespry-vole-938

At-fault driver's insurance already sending me a settlement check — should I cash it??

I'm still kind of in shock and honestly need some outside perspective because everyone around me is giving me different opinions.

About three weeks ago I got hit by someone who ran a red light and T-boned me on the driver's side. Their fault, 100%, confirmed by two witnesses and the police report. My car is a total loss and I've been dealing with that nightmare separately.

Here's what's freaking me out: I already have a check in my hand from the other driver's insurance for my bodily injury claim. Three weeks. The accident was three weeks ago.

I went to urgent care the day after and they noted soft tissue injuries to my neck and upper back, plus some bruising along my left arm. I've been doing okay-ish but I'm still sore every morning and certain movements genuinely hurt. Nothing feels "resolved" to me.

The check came with a release form that I'd have to sign. The letter basically says this closes out my bodily injury claim entirely.

I have my own med-pay coverage through my policy so I think that would cover me if symptoms get worse later... but I honestly don't know how that works once I've signed something with the other carrier.

My gut says three weeks is way too fast to know if I'm actually okay. Soft tissue stuff can linger or get worse, right? My sister says just take the money and be done with it. My coworker says I'm leaving money on the table.

Has anyone been in a similar spot? What did you do?

11replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

11 replies

  • 18
    sharp-kestrel-050

    Please do NOT cash that check without talking to someone first. I made that exact mistake after a rear-end collision — signed the release thinking I was fine, and two months later I needed physical therapy twice a week. Once you sign that release you are done. There's no going back to ask for more, no matter how bad things get.

    • 11
      clear-wolf-147

      Three weeks out and they're already pushing a settlement? That's a massive red flag. Insurance adjusters are trained to close claims fast and cheap before you fully understand the extent of your injuries. Soft tissue damage, especially in the neck and back, can take months to fully show up. They know that. That's why they're rushing.

    • 20
      tidy-crane-997

      I used to work claims, so I'll be straight with you: when a carrier moves this fast on a bodily injury settlement, it's almost never because they're being generous. They've done a quick calculation and figured they can close this cheap before your symptoms develop further. That release language is airtight — signing it really does end your ability to come back later. Your med-pay is a separate coverage but it doesn't replace what you might be giving up on the liability side.

  • 10
    plain-elk-562

    Three weeks is genuinely not enough time to know where you're landing with soft tissue injuries. I've seen patients feel "mostly okay" at the one-month mark and then hit a wall at two or three months when inflammation flares back up or the initial adrenaline response fully wears off. Upper back and neck injuries especially — please don't make permanent financial decisions while your body is still figuring out what it's doing.

  • 19
    cool-grouse-690

    Not legal advice, but I'd strongly encourage you to at least have a PI attorney review that release before you sign anything. Most do free consultations for situations exactly like this. The thing people don't realize is that a release isn't just about today's bills — it's about future treatment, lost wages down the road, everything. Three weeks post-accident is almost never an appropriate time to settle a soft tissue injury claim.

    • 17
      mellow-newt-789

      A couple of things worth knowing: your med-pay or PIP typically covers your own medical bills regardless of fault, but it's completely separate from what you can recover from the at-fault driver's liability coverage. Signing a release with their carrier doesn't affect your own coverage, but it does permanently cut off any additional claim against them. Also, check whether that release covers just bodily injury or if it also mentions property damage — sometimes they try to bundle things.

    • 3
      weary-dreamer188

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

    • 4
      weathered-road-soul800

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 14
    patient-seal-958

    Don't sign it. Simple as that. Get a free consult with a PI lawyer this week, see a doctor and get your injuries properly documented, and let the check sit on your counter as long as it needs to. The money isn't going anywhere. Your right to more money absolutely can disappear the second you sign.

  • 10
    swift-elk-181

    The good news here is that you haven't signed anything yet. You're asking the right questions at the right time. A lot of people cash the check first and Google it second. You're ahead of where a lot of people are in this situation — use that window.

  • 7
    brave-finch-466

    I'd want to know more before forming an opinion honestly. Did they explain how they broke down that number? Is it meant to cover just your medical bills so far, or is it truly a full and final settlement of all future claims too? Because those are very different things and the release language matters a lot. Have you actually read the full release document or just the cover letter?