The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Insurancesharp-mole-857

At-fault driver's insurance throwing peanuts at me while I can barely move my neck — what now?

So I'm still pretty frustrated and honestly a little lost, so bear with me.

About six weeks ago I was completely stopped at an intersection waiting for traffic to clear when someone rear-ended me going what felt like full speed. No skid marks, nothing — just a massive jolt. The other driver immediately told me AND the responding officer that he "got distracted for a second." It's in the police report. Fault is not in question here.

Here's where it gets messy. Turns out the guy was driving a family member's vehicle and had a license situation that… let's just say it raised some eyebrows. The officer noted it.

I've been dealing with neck and upper back pain ever since. My doctor referred me to a specialist, and I'm now looking at a stretch of physical therapy ahead of me. I haven't had a pain-free day since the crash. It's affecting my sleep, my focus at work, the whole thing.

The other driver's insurance finally accepted liability — okay, fine — but then came back with an offer that felt like an insult. Like, the kind of number that doesn't even cover what I've already spent, let alone what's coming. They're also dragging their feet on my vehicle, and I have zero confidence they're going to follow through on what they promised about covering my transportation in the meantime.

I know I shouldn't accept anything while I'm still in treatment. But I also don't know what leverage I actually have here or how hard I can push back without this blowing up in my face.

Has anyone dealt with a situation like this? What actually moved the needle for you?

9replies

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

9 replies

  • 15
    swift-fox-532

    That low opening offer is a classic move — they're testing whether you're desperate or uninformed. The moment you sign anything releasing liability, you're done, even if your pain gets worse next month. Don't touch that number while you're still in treatment. Not even close.

    • 21
      bold-mole-871

      I used to work the other side of this and I'll be honest with you: that first offer is almost never the real number. It's a probe. Adjusters have settlement ranges and they always start at the floor. The fact that you have documented ongoing treatment, a clear police report, and the driver's own admission puts you in a stronger position than most people realize. Keep every receipt, every co-pay, every note your doctor writes. That paper trail is everything.

  • 11
    warm-marten-276

    I went through something really similar last year — rear-ended, clear fault, and then got a laughably low offer while I was still going to PT twice a week. I made the mistake of thinking 'well it's something' and almost took it. A friend talked me out of it. Ended up getting significantly more once my treatment was finished and everything was documented. Hang tight.

    • 9
      gentle-lynx-725

      Not legal advice, but generally speaking: when liability is clear, documented, and admitted — and the claimant is still in active treatment — settling for a nominal amount would almost certainly undervalue the claim. The fact that there are potential coverage complications with the vehicle ownership situation is also worth having someone look at. A free consultation with a PI attorney costs you nothing and could clarify your options considerably.

  • 5
    tidy-wolf-809

    Please don't rush to settle before you've finished PT and your doctors have a clear picture of your recovery. Neck and upper back injuries from rear-end collisions can linger way longer than people expect, and sometimes what seems like it's getting better has a setback. You want your settlement to reflect the full picture, not just week six.

  • 12
    spry-grouse-271

    A few things worth knowing: (1) you are under no obligation to accept any offer, ever — especially while still in active treatment. (2) The driver's admission being in the police report is genuinely valuable. (3) If they're stalling on your rental or making promises they're not keeping in writing, document every single conversation — dates, names, what was said. That kind of paper trail matters if things escalate. Most PI attorneys do free consultations and work on contingency, so there's usually no upfront cost to at least get a read on where you stand.

  • 5
    tidy-wren-872

    Get a PI attorney on the phone this week. Free consult, no obligation. You're not doing anything wrong by talking to one, and frankly you're already behind by dealing with the adjuster alone. That's what they're counting on.

  • 18
    kind-kestrel-859

    This sounds so stressful on top of already dealing with pain and recovery. I'm sorry you're going through this. Please don't let them pressure you into anything before you're ready — you deserve to actually heal first.

  • 17
    bold-finch-266

    Quick question — did you get the rental promise in writing or was it just a verbal thing over the phone? Because that distinction matters a lot if they try to back out of it later. Also, has your doctor given any estimate on how long PT is expected to run?