The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
Medical & injuriesbrave-lynx-463

Delivery truck clipped me making a wide turn — reported no injuries but now I'm sore. What do I do?

So this happened earlier today and I'm still kind of shaken up. I was driving through my neighborhood when a commercial delivery truck — one of those big route vans — swung wide coming out of a side street and caught the front corner of my car. The driver got out, seemed kind of nervous, and immediately started talking on his phone (to his dispatcher, I'm guessing).

Cops came out, took our info, but didn't issue any citations. The driver told them I came out of nowhere, which is just not what happened. No dashcam on my end, unfortunately.

Here's my problem: when the officers asked if I was hurt, I said no because honestly I felt fine right then. But now — a few hours later — my neck feels stiff and there's a dull ache between my shoulder blades. It's not unbearable but it's definitely there.

A few things I'm worried about:

  • I already said "no injuries" to the police. Does that hurt me if I go get checked out now?
  • The truck is a commercial vehicle — does that change how the claim works vs. a regular person's car insurance?
  • The driver's company is obviously not a mom-and-pop operation. Should I be nervous they'll have way more resources to fight this than I do?

I'm planning to go to urgent care first thing tomorrow and then call to report the claim, but I honestly don't know what order to do things in or what to watch out for. Has anyone dealt with a commercial vehicle hitting them before? Any advice helps, I feel pretty lost right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 7
    plain-sparrow-822

    The neck and shoulder blade ache you're describing is really classic for whiplash-type strain — it almost always shows up hours later, not at the scene. Don't brush it off just because it's 'not that bad' right now. These things can get worse over the next 48-72 hours before they get better. Go to urgent care, be completely honest about what happened and when the pain started, and follow whatever they tell you about imaging or follow-up. Document everything — even just texting yourself notes about your symptoms each day helps.

  • 5
    genuine-fox-887

    Heads up: when you call to report the claim, do NOT give a recorded statement right away. They will almost certainly ask. You have the right to say you need more time. Adjusters — especially on the commercial side — are trained to get you on record as fast as possible while you're still rattled and before you know the full extent of your injuries. Be polite but don't let them rush you.

  • 21
    spry-marmot-201

    I used to work claims and I'll tell you — commercial vehicle accidents get handled very differently than personal auto. These companies have dedicated claims teams and sometimes outside legal counsel on retainer. That doesn't mean you're helpless, it just means you need to be organized. Keep every single record: photos of the damage, the police report number, your urgent care visit, any follow-up appointments. The paper trail matters more than people realize. And yes, what you said at the scene about no injuries can come up, but it's not a death sentence for your claim — context and medical records do a lot of work.

    • 22
      plain-finch-338

      Not legal advice, but — commercial carriers are used to handling these claims and they will be looking out for their client, not you. Given that liability sounds disputed right now AND you're already symptomatic, it might be worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you start negotiating anything. Most won't charge for an initial conversation. You're under no obligation to figure this out alone.

  • 14
    quiet-crow-550

    Step 1: urgent care tomorrow, no debate. Step 2: photos of everything if you haven't done it. Step 3: report the accident but don't give a recorded statement yet. Step 4: get the police report. Do those four things before you do anything else. Everything else can wait — those can't.

  • 18
    clear-owl-033

    I'm sorry this happened to you, that sounds so stressful especially when it wasn't your fault. Please don't tough out the neck pain — I've seen people brush off stuff like that and it turned into a much bigger issue months later. Take care of yourself first, the claim stuff will follow.

    • 8
      steady-traveler855

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

  • 22
    curious-vole-147

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me — felt totally fine at the scene, told the cops nothing was wrong, then woke up the next morning barely able to turn my head. Please go get checked out. The 'I said no injuries at the scene' thing sounds scarier than it is. Adrenaline masks pain, everyone knows that, and doctors will document it properly. I waited two days and regretted every hour I waited.

    • 14
      clever-sparrow-886

      A couple of practical things: First, get the police report as soon as it's available — usually a few days. Second, photograph your car's damage today if you haven't already, before anything gets moved or repaired. Third, when you go to urgent care, tell them specifically that this is related to a motor vehicle accident — that's important for how it gets coded. On the commercial vehicle question, yes, there's typically a separate commercial carrier involved and the process can move slower, but that's also not necessarily a bad thing.

    • 20
      clever-otter-237

      Quick question — did you get the name of the driver and the company DOT number off the truck? And was a police report actually filed, or did the officers just collect info informally? That distinction matters a lot for how you proceed with the commercial carrier.

    • 0
      restless-overpass892

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