The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentskeen-beaver-774

Got rear-ended by an 18-wheeler last month — nobody told me how different this would be

I've been in a fender-bender before and honestly thought this would be the same kind of headache. It's not. Not even close.

A commercial truck hit me from behind on the interstate while I was slowing down for traffic. The impact was way harder than I expected and my car got pushed into the vehicle ahead of me. So now I'm dealing with damage on both ends of my car, a neck injury that's apparently a herniated disc, and an insurance process that feels like it's being run by a completely different rulebook than any regular accident.

Here's what nobody warned me about:

  • The trucking company had their own investigator on scene faster than the police showed up. I didn't even realize who he was at first.
  • There are apparently federal regulations that apply to truck drivers — hours of service logs, maintenance records, stuff like that — that you can actually request. I had no idea.
  • The insurance carrier on the truck side is way more aggressive than any auto insurer I've dealt with. They called me within 24 hours asking for a recorded statement. I said I needed time.
  • My own insurer seems confused about how to handle it too.

I'm not in a huge city, just a mid-sized area, and finding attorneys who actually specialize in commercial trucking cases (vs. just general car accidents) has been harder than I thought.

Has anyone else been through a truck accident specifically? Any pitfalls I should know about before I make any moves? I feel like I'm already behind because I didn't know the rules of this particular game.

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9 replies

  • 20
    warm-wren-194

    Oh man, yes. I was sideswiped by a delivery truck two years ago and the thing that blindsided me (pun intended) was exactly what you said — the trucking company's people were SO organized and SO fast. I later found out that's standard practice. They start building their defense immediately. You need to be just as proactive, even if it feels overwhelming right now.

  • 11
    tidy-marten-292

    I used to work on the commercial auto side and I want to be straight with you: that recorded statement request in the first 24 hours is a deliberate move. You're in pain, you're stressed, and anything you say can get used to minimize what they owe you later. 'I feel okay' becomes their exhibit A. Do not give a recorded statement to the trucking company's insurer without talking to someone first. Period.

    • 17
      candid-bison-335

      Quick question — did you get a police report filed? And was the truck driver cited for anything at the scene? That stuff matters a lot for where things go from here. Also, do you know if the truck was operated by an independent contractor or directly by the company? That distinction changes the liability picture significantly.

  • 21
    quiet-lynx-384

    The federal regulations angle is real and really important. Trucking companies operating commercially have to comply with FMCSA rules — that covers driver logs, inspection records, weight limits, mandatory rest periods, all of it. The tricky part is that some of those records have retention windows, meaning they can legally be destroyed after a certain period. If you think there might be a violation in there (fatigued driving, overloaded trailer, deferred maintenance), getting a legal hold on those records sooner rather than later matters a lot. Not legal advice, just something worth knowing.

  • 16
    clever-badger-988

    The fact that their investigator beat the cops to the scene tells you everything you need to know about how seriously they take protecting themselves. You should take protecting yourself just as seriously.

    • 7
      curious-owl-286

      You're picking up on something real — commercial truck accidents are genuinely different legally. Multiple parties can potentially share liability: the driver, the trucking company, the cargo loader, the vehicle manufacturer if there's a mechanical issue. The discovery process is also more complex. I'd strongly encourage you to consult with someone who focuses on commercial vehicle cases before you sign or agree to anything. Not legal advice, just context.

  • 12
    gentle-sparrow-495

    Please don't let the legal stuff distract you from actually treating that herniated disc. I've seen people put off PT and imaging because they're focused on the claim, and then months later they're in worse shape AND their documented medical history has gaps that hurt them. Keep every appointment, follow through on every referral, and make sure everything is in writing. Your health is the priority, and honestly good medical documentation helps your case too.

  • 12
    humble-fox-661

    Three things: don't give that recorded statement, get a PI attorney who has specifically handled commercial trucking cases (ask them directly how many truck cases they've done, not just 'car accidents'), and photograph absolutely everything you still can — your injuries, your car from every angle, the scene if you can go back. You're not behind yet, but move with some urgency.

  • 9
    steady-badger-999

    I just want to say — a herniated disc is serious and I hope you're taking care of yourself through all this. It's a lot to manage at once. Don't forget to lean on people around you too, not just for the practical stuff but just emotionally. This kind of thing takes a toll.