The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
Legal questionshearty-raven-673

Chiro keeps pushing me to get a PI lawyer — is that just a sales pitch?

So I got rear-ended about six weeks ago at a red light. Pretty classic situation — I was completely stopped, other driver didn't brake in time, hit me hard enough that I had to pull over and gather myself. No ambulance or anything, but my neck and upper back were wrecked for days afterward.

The at-fault driver's insurance accepted liability pretty fast, which honestly surprised me. They sorted out my car repairs without too much drama. My own insurance kicked in my PIP coverage and it's been covering my doctor visits, physical therapy, and now chiropractic appointments. Everything has felt... weirdly smooth? Like I was bracing for a fight that never came.

But here's the thing — my chiropractor has now brought up, twice, that I should really think about hiring a personal injury attorney. He says the insurance company might lowball me when it's time to actually settle, and that I deserve compensation beyond just medical bills.

Part of me wonders if he's just saying that because lawyers sometimes send clients his way, or because there's some financial arrangement I don't understand. But another part of me wonders if he sees this stuff all the time and actually knows something I don't.

My treatment is probably another 4–6 weeks out at minimum. I haven't signed anything with the insurance company yet.

Is the chiro being straight with me, or is this standard upselling? Has anyone been in this situation and regretted NOT getting a lawyer? Or regretted getting one? Just want honest takes from people who've been through it.

13replies

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

13 replies

  • 10
    humble-crow-138

    Your chiro probably does have a referral relationship with certain attorneys — that's real and you should know it. But that doesn't mean the advice is wrong. Both things can be true. Go get a free consult from a PI lawyer independently, not necessarily whoever the chiro recommends, and make your own call.

  • 6
    genuine-finch-847

    Ugh, this is so stressful even when it's going 'well.' You were just sitting at a light and someone hit you — you shouldn't have to navigate all this on your own. At minimum just talk to a lawyer for free, see what they say. You don't have to hire anyone. Just get the information.

    • 5
      level-mile-marker677

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

  • 22
    kind-lynx-460

    From a medical standpoint — don't rush your discharge from treatment just because things feel 'fine enough.' Whiplash injuries can have a delayed tail. Some people plateau early and then have flare-ups weeks later. Make sure your provider is documenting everything thoroughly along the way, because that documentation is what tells the story of your recovery if it ever becomes relevant in a settlement.

  • 7
    spry-crane-134

    I'd push back a little and ask: how bad is the injury, really? Is this a couple weeks of soreness that's almost resolved, or are you still in real pain six weeks in with no clear end date? Those are pretty different situations. A minor soft-tissue case that resolves cleanly might not be worth the complexity of involving a lawyer. But if you're still struggling and treatment is ongoing, that changes things.

    • 1
      thankful-co-pilot132

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 14
    steady-owl-658

    One thing worth knowing: most PI attorneys work on contingency, so there's no upfront cost to at least have a consultation. You can talk to someone, get a read on whether your case is worth pursuing beyond just medical bill reimbursement, and decide from there. The consult itself is free basically everywhere.

    Also — do NOT sign any release or settlement paperwork with the at-fault insurance until you're fully done with treatment and know your final medical costs. Once you sign, that's it. No going back if symptoms get worse.

    • 2
      careful-dreamer890

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 11
    mellow-fox-703

    I used to work claims. The smooth early experience you're describing is pretty normal when liability is clear — there's no reason for us to fight you on repairs or PIP stuff. But the settlement at the end is a completely different conversation. That's where the real negotiation happens, and unrepresented claimants almost always walk away with less. Not always dramatically less, but less. Your chiro isn't wrong to flag it.

    • 1
      plainspoken-backseat104

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 12
    plain-wolf-124

    Honestly? I was in almost this exact spot two years ago and I brushed off the lawyer suggestion. Kept thinking 'everything's going fine, why rock the boat.' Then when I was done treating and ready to settle, the adjuster came in with a number that barely covered my out-of-pocket costs, let alone anything for the months of pain I dealt with. By that point I was so worn down I just took it. Still kind of kick myself. The chiro probably isn't wrong — they see the end of these stories more than we do.

    • 14
      calm-sparrow-805

      The 'everything's going smooth' phase is literally a strategy. They're nice and cooperative right up until you're done treating and they make you an offer. That's when you find out what they actually think your case is worth. Don't mistake early cooperation for generosity — they're just building goodwill so you feel awkward pushing back later.

    • 8
      tired-walker115

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?