The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
careful-vole-901

Got hit by an 18-wheeler hauling fuel — does case value actually depend on what they're carrying?

So about two months ago I was rear-ended on the highway by a semi that was hauling some kind of fuel load. The impact basically shoved my car into the guardrail and I spun into the shoulder. Walked away with a fractured collarbone, two cracked ribs, and what my doctor is now calling a 'significant soft tissue injury' to my lower back that they're saying could be chronic.

I've been off work since it happened. I'm a contractor — I do physical labor — so 'just work from home for a while' isn't an option for me. Every week I'm out is money I'm not making, and I've got a family counting on that income.

I've talked to a couple of attorneys and they keep saying things like 'cases like this can be worth a lot' but nobody will give me even a ballpark. I get that every case is different, but I'm trying to understand what actually drives the value of something like this.

Does the fact that it was a fuel tanker matter? Like, does the type of cargo change anything legally or from a damages standpoint? Or does it really just come down to my injuries and lost wages?

I'm also wondering if the trucking company's insurance is different from regular auto insurance and whether that changes how hard you have to fight to get a fair settlement. These carriers seem way more organized than a regular at-fault driver would be.

Any insight from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now. Feeling pretty lost.

11replies

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

11 replies

  • 8
    mellow-raven-663

    I was hit by a commercial truck two years ago — not a tanker, just a freight hauler — and I can tell you the trucking company's insurance operation is a completely different beast than dealing with a regular car insurance claim. They had an accident response team on scene before I even left the hospital. These companies are prepared for this. Please don't try to handle it alone.

    • 16
      bright-seal-790

      Not legal advice, but I can speak generally: the type of cargo can matter in commercial truck cases, especially if the cargo created additional hazards or if the carrier was subject to specific federal safety regulations around that material. Separate from that, what often drives value is the combination of injury severity, documented lost income, and whether there's evidence of negligence beyond just the crash itself — things like driver logs, maintenance records, hours-of-service compliance. A good attorney will dig into all of that. Not legal advice.

    • 19
      mellow-grouse-397

      Please don't underestimate the back injury. 'Significant soft tissue damage' can sound minor compared to the broken bones, but chronic back issues from trauma are genuinely life-altering. I've seen patients whose fractures healed fine but the back pain became their main disability years later. Make sure your doctors are documenting everything thoroughly and that you're following up consistently. That paper trail matters for your case AND for your health.

    • 10
      calm-neighbor538

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 10
    quiet-heron-279

    I used to work on the commercial auto side for a regional carrier. Here's something most people don't know: trucking company insurers assign specialized large-loss adjusters to these claims immediately, and their entire job is to contain exposure. They're friendly, they're fast, and they're strategic. If someone from that side has already contacted you, be very careful what you say and what you sign. Even 'I'm feeling a little better today' in a casual conversation can show up in their notes.

  • 8
    brave-dove-201

    The fact that they're 'organized' is exactly why you should be worried. That organization is not for your benefit. They've handled hundreds of cases like yours and they know exactly how to make a lowball offer feel reasonable. Don't let them rush you into anything before you know the full picture of your medical situation — especially with a back injury that might not show its full impact for months.

    • 0
      thankful-mile-marker322

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

  • 17
    humble-tern-149

    A few things that will matter a lot in a case like this: (1) whether the driver was operating within federal hours-of-service limits, (2) whether the truck had current inspection records, and (3) whether the carrier has prior violations. All of that is discoverable. Also, as a self-employed contractor your lost income documentation is going to need to be solid — tax returns, client invoices, contracts. Start pulling that together now even if you haven't hired anyone yet.

    • 2
      honest-dreamer960

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 17
    daring-dove-223

    Stop waiting for a ballpark number and start building your case. Document everything: every medical visit, every day you couldn't work, every task you can't do around the house. Take photos of anything visible. Keep a simple journal. The attorneys who won't give you a number yet aren't dodging you — they genuinely can't know until your medical situation stabilizes. But you can control how well-documented your damages are right now.

  • 6
    patient-tern-984

    This sounds incredibly stressful, especially with the pressure of supporting your family while you're unable to work. I hope you're also taking care of yourself mentally through all of this — the financial stress on top of physical recovery is a lot. Wishing you a solid recovery and some real answers soon.