The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
Insuranceclever-sparrow-458

At-fault driver's insurance keeps calling me — do I have to talk to them??

Still kind of shaken up from this whole thing so bear with me.

A couple weeks ago I got caught in one of those horrible chain-reaction pileups on the interstate. Traffic had been slowing down for a while, I came to a full stop, the car behind me stopped, the one behind them stopped — and then out of nowhere the last car just plowed into everyone. Like they weren't paying attention at all. I got sandwiched from behind and my car got pushed forward, barely missed the SUV in front of me.

I've already gone through my own insurance. Filed the claim, sent photos, gave my statement, the whole thing. My car's in the shop waiting on a repair estimate.

But now the at-fault driver's insurance company keeps reaching out. They want me to fill out their own paperwork, send them photos, give them a recorded statement. The rep was really friendly about it but also kind of pushy — like they called twice in three days.

Here's where I'm confused: do I actually have to do all this? I already did it with my own insurer. Is there any reason to cooperate with the other driver's company directly? Could it hurt me?

I should also mention my neck has been pretty sore since the crash and I went to urgent care the day after. Nothing broken but they said soft tissue stuff can take time to show up fully. So I'm a little nervous about saying anything on record before I know how bad the injury actually is.

Any experience with this kind of situation would be really helpful. Thanks.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 8
    hearty-sparrow-242

    Do NOT give them a recorded statement. That is the big one. The friendly adjuster calling you twice in three days isn't doing it out of the goodness of their heart — they're trying to lock you into a version of events before you know the full extent of your injuries. You are under zero legal obligation to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. Send them photos if you want, but talking on record? I'd hold off until you know what's going on with your neck.

    • 6
      tired-survivor625

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

  • 19
    humble-sparrow-018

    Worked in claims for years so let me be straight with you. The other insurance company is reaching out because they know their driver is likely at fault and they want to control the narrative early. Recorded statements get used to find inconsistencies later. The fact that you mentioned soft tissue symptoms is especially important — those claims can grow significantly and they want your early 'I feel okay' comments on file. You can cooperate on basic stuff like confirming the accident happened, but a full recorded statement before you're done treating? I'd seriously think twice.

    • 9
      cool-fox-072

      You're not legally required to give a recorded statement to the at-fault driver's insurer. That's a really common misconception. You do have a duty to cooperate with your own insurance company, which you've already done. With the other side, you can provide basic info but you're not obligated to jump through all their hoops — especially before you have a clear picture of your medical situation. If they keep pushing, you can honestly just tell them your claim is still in progress and you'll be in touch.

  • 9
    tidy-otter-701

    Please keep going to follow-up appointments for that neck. Soft tissue injuries from rear-end collisions can genuinely take days or even a couple of weeks to fully declare themselves — the adrenaline from the accident masks a lot. Make sure everything is documented by a provider, even if it feels minor right now. That paper trail matters for your health and for any claim you end up making.

    • 7
      quick-beaver-608

      I went through almost the exact same thing last year — multi-car, not my fault, and the other driver's insurance was calling me constantly. I made the mistake of doing a recorded statement early because I thought I was being cooperative and it was just the right thing to do. Wish I'd waited. My back ended up being way worse than I initially said on that call. Learn from my experience and pump the brakes until you know how your neck is doing.

  • 12
    daring-bison-480

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: you have no obligation to give a recorded statement to a third-party insurer. You can decline that specific request. Given that you're already experiencing symptoms and sought medical care, it would be worth at least having a free consultation with a personal injury attorney before you say anything on record to the other side. Many PI attorneys offer free consults and can tell you pretty quickly whether your situation warrants representation. The call you're getting right now is very standard adjuster behavior.

    • 1
      steady-parent183

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

  • 20
    silent-lynx-852

    Short answer: send the photos, skip the recorded statement, and get your neck properly evaluated before you settle anything. That's really the whole playbook here. Don't ghost them entirely or be rude — just be vague and say you're still treating and will follow up. That buys you time without burning bridges.

    • 16
      bold-swan-767

      I just want to say — being in a pileup when you're already dealing with stressful stuff is a lot. Take care of yourself first. The paperwork can wait a little bit, your health can't. Hope your neck feels better soon 💙

    • 10
      careful-dreamer439

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