The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Recovery & winsmellow-wren-834

Finally pushing to settle my TBI claim — how do I know if their offer is fair?

Hey everyone. Long time lurker, first time posting. I got rear-ended about a year and a half ago by someone who ran a red light. The impact was hard enough that my head hit the side window and I blacked out briefly. At the ER they diagnosed me with a mild traumatic brain injury and a torn ligament in my shoulder.

The shoulder healed okay after PT, but the brain injury has been a whole different story. I dealt with migraines almost daily for nearly eight months, sensitivity to light and sound, major word-finding problems (I work in a field where I talk to people all day — it was humiliating), mood swings, and I still have a low-level ringing in my ears that my neurologist says may be permanent.

My employer's short-term disability covered most of my lost wages, and health insurance picked up a big chunk of the medical side. Now I'm at the point where I need to actually settle the personal injury portion with the at-fault driver's insurance.

I've handled everything myself so far — organized all my records, wrote up a demand letter, the whole thing. The adjuster has been just responsive enough to avoid being ghosted, but I can feel them dragging it out.

The policy limit on the other driver's policy is decent but not huge. I'm not trying to be greedy — I just want to feel like the number they eventually offer actually reflects what I've been through.

Has anyone settled a TBI or lingering neurological injury claim on their own? How did you know when an offer was reasonable vs. lowball? Any pressure tactics I should watch out for? I'd really appreciate any perspective.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 15
    tidy-stoat-109

    I settled a concussion claim on my own two years ago and honestly my biggest regret was not waiting long enough. The adjuster kept nudging me toward a number before I even knew if my symptoms were truly resolved. The tinnitus piece especially — if that's permanent, that changes things significantly. Don't rush.

    • 8
      careful-tern-466

      Please make sure you have something in writing from your neurologist about the tinnitus being likely permanent before you settle anything. Courts and adjusters both respond to that word — permanent — in a way they don't respond to 'ongoing' or 'lingering.' It's not about being dramatic, it's just accurate, and you deserve for your file to reflect reality.

  • 14
    gentle-marten-114

    The 'just responsive enough' thing you described is a classic delay tactic. They're hoping you get frustrated or financially squeezed and accept less than you deserve. They know the longer this drags, the more likely you are to fold. Don't let them manufacture urgency on their timeline.

    • 14
      curious-crane-561

      Worked inside an insurance company for years. Here's what I'd tell you: adjusters are evaluated on closing files at low cost. When they finally make an offer, it's almost never their ceiling — it's their opener. The way your file sounds, with documented neurologist visits and a potentially permanent symptom, that's what we internally called a 'soft tissue plus' file, meaning it has more leverage than a basic whiplash claim. The permanent tinnitus documentation is genuinely meaningful. Make sure that's front and center in anything you send them.

    • 20
      brave-swan-174

      A few practical things: make sure your demand letter specifically itemizes non-economic damages separately from your medicals and lost wages. Adjusters are trained to anchor on the medical bills number, but your pain and suffering, the cognitive disruption to your career, the permanent symptom — those are separate categories. Also, if you haven't already, send everything certified mail and keep a log of every phone call with dates and what was said. Sounds tedious but it matters if things get contentious.

  • 12
    cool-marmot-506

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this generally: TBI claims with documented cognitive and neurological symptoms are among the more complex to value correctly because the impacts are often non-economic — pain, lost quality of life, emotional toll. Those are real damages but harder to put a number on without experience doing it. If you're close to a policy limit situation, even a free consult with a PI attorney might help you benchmark what you have. Most won't charge you just to tell you where your case stands.

    • 6
      level-sidewalk670

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 9
    kind-tern-603

    Honestly? If there's a permanent symptom and you're anywhere near the policy limit, you probably shouldn't be doing this alone. I know you've come this far yourself and that's genuinely impressive, but the last mile of a TBI settlement is where people leave the most money on the table. At minimum get a free consult before you sign anything.

  • 17
    hearty-fox-735

    I just want to say — the word-finding issues affecting your job, the daily migraines for eight months, the mood stuff — that's not a small thing you went through. I hope whatever number you land on actually reflects how hard the last year and a half has been. You deserve that.

    • 4
      thankful-backseat880

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 13
    gentle-marten-211

    Quick question — when you say the short-term disability and health insurance covered most of it, do you have a clear picture of what's actually still out of pocket for you? And is there any subrogation involved, meaning will your health insurer want some of the settlement back? That can really change how you evaluate an offer and I've seen people surprised by it at the finish line.