The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
Car accidentsclever-swan-032

Got rear-ended by a city bus — do I even handle this like a normal accident?

So this happened about a week ago and I'm still kind of shaken up trying to figure out what to do next.

I was stopped at a red light on a pretty busy street when a city transit bus just... plowed into the back of me. No horn, no skidding, nothing — just a full impact out of nowhere. My car got pushed forward maybe half a car length. The trunk looks crunched from the outside but I honestly have no idea what's going on underneath the bumper or with the frame.

I've been dealing with this tension headache that won't quit and my neck feels like I slept wrong for a week straight. I finally made a doctor appointment but the earliest they could get me in is a few days out. I know I should've gone to urgent care right away but I kept thinking it would just go away.

Here's where things get weird for me — the bus is operated by the city, so does that change who I'm even filing a claim against? Like is it the transit authority's insurance, the city itself, what? My own insurance company has been pretty vague about it.

I have some photos from the scene and a couple of witnesses gave me their numbers, which I'm grateful for. But I don't have a dashcam so it's basically my word plus the witnesses.

Is this the kind of situation where I should just let the insurers sort it out, or does the government-entity angle make it complicated enough that I really need a lawyer involved early? I've never dealt with anything like this before and I honestly don't know what questions I'm even supposed to be asking.

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10 replies

  • 9
    sharp-vole-337

    Oh man, I went through something similar when a county vehicle sideswiped me a couple years back. The government entity thing is VERY different from a regular accident claim — there are special notice deadlines you might not even know about that are way shorter than normal. Like, in some places you have to file a formal claim against the city within a few months or you lose your right to sue entirely. Please don't wait on this one.

    • 5
      honest-driver310

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 22
    candid-grouse-028

    Not legal advice, but yes — claims against government entities typically involve something called a 'notice of claim' requirement, and those deadlines can be shockingly short (sometimes 60-90 days from the incident). Missing that window can bar your claim completely regardless of how clear liability is. I'd strongly suggest at least consulting with a PI attorney soon, many do free consultations. Don't just rely on your own insurer to navigate this for you.

  • 10
    gentle-sparrow-669

    Your own insurance being 'vague' is a red flag to me. They're not really incentivized to walk you through how to get full compensation from a third party — that's not their job. The transit authority's claims department is also going to be experienced at minimizing payouts. You're basically going up against professionals who do this every day.

  • 15
    tidy-kestrel-576

    I used to work claims and I'll tell you — municipal and transit authority claims have their own whole process and the adjusters on their end are usually very seasoned. They're going to document everything, take recorded statements, and look for any reason to reduce what they owe you. Please don't give a recorded statement to their side without understanding what you're agreeing to. And yes, those notice-of-claim deadlines are real and they will use a missed deadline against you without hesitation.

  • 21
    genuine-finch-631

    Please don't blow off that neck pain and the headaches. Tension headaches after a rear-end impact can sometimes be a sign of whiplash or even a mild concussion, and symptoms can actually get worse over the first week or two before they get better. Go to that doctor appointment and be really specific about every symptom — when it started, what makes it worse, all of it. That documentation matters both for your health and for your claim.

  • 6
    quick-elk-394

    Ugh this sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with this. You're already doing the right things — getting the witnesses' info, seeing a doctor. Just don't try to tough out the neck stuff, okay? And please don't sign or agree to anything from the transit authority before you've talked to someone who actually knows what they're doing.

    • 8
      warm-hare-564

      The good news is you have witnesses who stayed and gave you their info — that's honestly huge and a lot of people don't get that. And the fact that it's a city bus actually means there's almost certainly dashcam footage on the bus itself. An attorney can send a preservation letter to make sure that footage doesn't get deleted. You've got more going for you than you might think right now.

  • 22
    genuine-elk-996

    To answer your question directly — yes, suing or claiming against a government entity is procedurally different from a regular car accident claim. The 'notice of claim' process the others mentioned is real. You typically have to formally notify the government body of your intent to make a claim before you can even file a lawsuit, and the clock starts from the date of the accident. Every state/city is different but the window is often much shorter than the standard personal injury statute of limitations. Keep all your records, get that police or incident report from the transit authority, and track every expense and missed work day from here on out.

  • 12
    tidy-newt-238

    You need a personal injury lawyer, full stop. Not because anything is necessarily going to go to court, but because you're dealing with a government entity that has its own legal team and you literally do not know the procedural rules of this game. Most PI attorneys work on contingency so it costs you nothing upfront. Stop trying to figure this out alone — one free consultation call could save you from accidentally tanking your own claim.