The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
warm-stoat-641

At-fault driver's insurer admitted fault fast — does that actually speed up my settlement?

So I was rear-ended at a red light about two months ago and it was pretty bad. Broken collarbone, some nerve damage in my shoulder, and a pretty gnarly scar along my jaw that my doctor says may need a revision procedure down the road. The other driver got a citation at the scene and their insurance called me within days basically saying 'yeah, our guy was at fault, no question.'

Here's what I can't figure out: does that early admission actually mean anything for how fast this resolves? I assumed it would fast-track everything, but my doctor still has me in PT twice a week and won't even talk about a final prognosis until at least three or four more months out. I've missed a ton of work — I'm in a physical job — and the bills are stacking up.

I've heard the phrase 'don't settle until you reach MMI' thrown around on here but honestly I don't fully understand what that means in practice or why it matters if liability is already off the table.

Also a little nervous because the adjuster has been weirdly nice and keeps checking in. Is that normal or should I be reading into it?

Anyone been through something similar where fault was clear but the case still dragged? Would love to hear how it actually played out for you.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 16
    cool-seal-468

    Stop taking calls from that adjuster without knowing your rights. You don't have to be rude, but you also don't have to update them on your recovery every time they check in. They're gathering information. Every friendly chat is potentially useful to them and potentially harmful to you.

  • 14
    quiet-hare-971

    Worked claims for years. Admitting liability early is sometimes a strategy, not just honesty. If they concede fault quickly, they control the narrative and you feel like you 'won' something — which makes you more likely to settle damages cheap and fast. The value of your claim lives entirely in your medical records and future prognosis, not in who was at fault. They know that. You should too.

    • 10
      curious-optimist293

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 14
    gentle-vole-940

    Not legal advice, but the short answer is: admitted liability ≠ fast settlement. Those are two separate tracks. Liability was the easy part here. Damages — especially with ongoing treatment, potential future procedures, and lost wages from physical work — take time to fully document. Rushing to settle before you understand the complete picture of your injuries is one of the most common and costly mistakes people make. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you respond to any offers.

  • 13
    cool-raven-196

    MMI stands for Maximum Medical Improvement — basically the point where your doctors say your condition has stabilized, even if you're not 100% back to normal. It matters a lot because until you hit MMI, nobody really knows the full scope of your future medical needs, lost earning capacity, or whether you'll need additional procedures like that scar revision you mentioned. Settling before MMI means you're guessing at a number, and if you guess low, you can't go back for more.

    • 7
      level-sidewalk432

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 11
    sharp-lynx-892

    I know it feels like limbo right now, but having undisputed liability actually does remove one major stressor. A lot of people on here are fighting just to get fault recognized for months. You're past that hurdle — use this time to focus on your treatment, document everything, and make sure your medical team is being thorough. That paper trail is your best asset.

    • 1
      restless-offramp992

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 5
    calm-swift-678

    Oh man, I was in almost this exact situation — liability was crystal clear, other driver even apologized in writing. I thought it would be wrapped up in a few months. Nope. Took well over a year because my doctors kept finding new stuff and I wasn't done treating. Honestly I'm glad I waited because the final number reflected everything, not just the first wave of bills.

    • 18
      tidy-wren-846

      That adjuster being 'weirdly nice' is a huge flag for me. They're building rapport so you feel comfortable accepting a lowball offer the moment you seem frustrated or financially stressed. They admitted fault because the facts were undeniable — that costs them nothing. The real fight is always about how much. Don't let the friendliness lower your guard.

    • 11
      swift-heron-125

      The scar revision piece is really important and I'm glad your doctor mentioned it. Scar tissue behaves differently over time, and revision decisions are often made 6-12 months out minimum. If you settle before that's determined, you could be on the hook for a procedure that costs way more than you anticipated. Make sure your medical records are documenting all of this, including the functional impact on your shoulder and nerve symptoms — vague records hurt claims.