The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Medical & injurieskind-finch-927

Fender bender with no injuries — do I even need to think about a lawyer?

So this happened about two weeks ago. I was stopped at a red light and the guy behind me just... didn't stop. Wasn't going fast, maybe 10-15 mph, but it was enough to crunch my rear bumper pretty good and jolt me forward hard. No airbags, no broken glass, nothing dramatic.

At the scene I was honestly more annoyed than anything. We exchanged info, I took a bunch of photos, and I called the non-emergency line to get an officer to come out and document it. The other driver was apologetic and said flat out it was his fault — which, yeah, obviously.

Here's the thing though. I felt totally fine that day. A little stiff the next morning, but I chalked it up to sleeping weird. Now almost two weeks out my neck is still bugging me when I turn to the left and I'm getting occasional headaches. Nothing unbearable, but it's not going away either.

I haven't seen a doctor yet because I kept thinking it would just resolve on its own. The other driver's insurance already called me and they're being super friendly and asking how I'm feeling. Part of me just wants to settle this quickly and move on — it's honestly exhausting dealing with it on top of work and everything else.

But should I be talking to an attorney even for something this "minor"? Or am I overthinking it? Has anyone dealt with something similar where it seemed small but turned into more than you expected?

Any thoughts appreciated. I feel like I'm flying blind here.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 15
    kind-marmot-528

    Oh man, this is almost exactly what happened to me a couple years ago. Rear-ended at low speed, felt fine, didn't bother with a doctor. I settled pretty fast because the adjuster was so nice and I just wanted it done. About six weeks later my neck was a mess and I had already signed away my right to anything further. Please don't make my mistake — at least get checked out before you sign a single thing.

    • 7
      genuine-owl-646

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the question of whether you need a lawyer is different from whether talking to one is a good idea. Most PI attorneys do free consultations, so there's really no downside to a quick call. The thing that jumps out at me is the ongoing symptoms — once you settle and sign a release, that's typically permanent. You want to understand what you're releasing before you do it. Worth at least a conversation.

    • 7
      curious-stoat-615

      Three things you need to do right now: 1) See a doctor this week, 2) Stop answering the adjuster's questions about your health, 3) Don't sign anything. Everything else can wait. You can always decide not to hire a lawyer later — you can't undo a settlement.

  • 8
    gentle-wolf-583

    The neck stiffness and headaches you're describing are really common after a rear-impact collision, even at lower speeds. It's called whiplash and it genuinely can take weeks to fully show up. The fact that it's still there at two weeks and not improving is worth taking seriously. Go see your doctor or an urgent care, get it documented, and let them assess whether imaging makes sense. That visit creates a medical record tied to the accident date — which matters a lot later on, whatever you decide to do legally.

  • 5
    patient-newt-809

    "Super friendly" adjusters calling you early are not your friends, full stop. Their job is to get you to settle fast and cheap before you know the full extent of your injuries. The niceness is a tactic. Do not give them a recorded statement about how you're feeling. Do not accept anything until you know what your medical situation actually is.

    • 10
      tidy-beaver-194

      I used to work claims for a carrier and I'll be straight with you — when we called injury claimants early and casual like that, we were fishing. We wanted to hear you say "I feel pretty okay" on a recorded line. That becomes our evidence that your injuries weren't serious. You don't have to be rude, but tell them you're still being evaluated and you'll be in touch. That's it. Nothing more.

  • 12
    calm-bison-487

    I'd just hate for you to sign something and then find out a month from now your neck actually needs PT or something. You've already dealt with the stress of the accident — don't rush the resolution just to be done with it. Take care of yourself first.

  • 9
    quiet-wren-712

    How fast do you think he was actually going when he hit you? And did you get a copy of the police report yet? I ask because the speed and the documented fault both matter a lot. If the report clearly shows he was at fault and you have his insurance info, you're in an okay position — but I'd want to know those details before assuming it'll all be easy.

    • 4
      level-late-shift782

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 19
    sharp-marmot-460

    The good news is you did a lot of things right — photos, police report, got his info. You're not starting from zero here. A lot of people panic after accidents and make mistakes at the scene that hurt them later. You didn't. Now just add "see a doctor" to the list and you're in a solid position to figure out next steps, with or without an attorney.