The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Car accidentsclever-tern-872

Got rear-ended by a delivery van — company's insurer already calling with a settlement. Too fast??

So this happened three days ago and I'm still kind of in shock, honestly.

I was sitting at a red light when a commercial delivery van plowed into the back of me. My car got pushed forward into the intersection. The van barely had a scratch. My car is probably totaled — still waiting on the adjuster to make it official.

I went to urgent care the same day because my neck and right shoulder were killing me. They did X-rays and some other imaging. Nothing broken, but they flagged some soft tissue stuff and told me to follow up with my regular doctor. I also have a pre-existing lower back issue from an old injury, and I'm honestly worried about what this might have stirred up.

Here's the thing: the delivery company's insurance called me yesterday — like less than 48 hours after the crash — and offered me a lump sum for my injuries plus a separate prepaid card to cover "future medical expenses." The numbers sound significant to me, especially since my own health insurance covered most of the urgent care visit.

But my shoulder still hurts every time I lift my arm, I haven't slept more than a few hours since it happened, and my back is doing something weird that it wasn't doing before.

My doctor literally said do not make any decisions for at least two weeks because soft tissue injuries can take time to fully show up. But part of me is tempted to just take the money and be done with the stress.

Has anyone else had a company's insurance come at you this fast? Is this normal? Should I be worried about what they're trying to get ahead of?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 12
    kind-hare-837

    A couple of practical things: first, do NOT sign any release or settlement agreement without reading every word — specifically look for language like 'full and final settlement of all claims.' Second, that prepaid card for medical expenses might sound helpful but accepting it could be treated as partial acceptance of their offer depending on how it's structured. Third, get everything they've sent you in writing and don't give them a recorded statement. These aren't scare tactics, just basics.

    • 3
      hopeful-survivor742

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

  • 13
    spry-wolf-059

    Please don't let the stress of the situation push you into a decision you can't undo. I totally get wanting it to be over — the calls, the paperwork, all of it is exhausting on top of actually being hurt. But you deserve to actually know what's wrong with your body first. Give yourself that time.

    • 3
      steady-wanderer337

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 8
    wise-swan-909

    Not legal advice, but the general principle attorneys follow is: never settle a personal injury claim until you've reached what's called 'maximum medical improvement' — meaning your doctors have a clear picture of what's permanent and what's not. You're three days in. You're nowhere near that point. A fast offer from a commercial carrier on a clear-liability case should make you more cautious, not less. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you do anything.

    • 16
      mellow-beaver-853

      Here's the short version: your shoulder might need an MRI. Your back might need follow-up. You don't know yet. The money will still exist in two weeks. Your ability to ask for more won't. Wait.

  • 20
    spry-owl-118

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me a couple years ago — commercial truck, quick offer, I thought it sounded like a lot of money. I took it. Six weeks later I needed physical therapy twice a week for four months and the settlement barely covered half of it. I wish I had waited. I really do.

    • 10
      kind-parent596

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 19
    bright-beaver-411

    Three days out from a rear-end collision is WAY too early to know your full picture. I see this all the time — people feel okay-ish at first and then week two hits and they can barely turn their head. Rotator cuff issues especially can sneak up on you. And if your lower back was already a concern before this, you really need to let a doctor track that for several weeks minimum before anyone puts a number on your injuries.

  • 14
    curious-crane-599

    The speed of that offer is the red flag, full stop. Insurers — especially ones covering commercial vehicles — do not rush to your door out of kindness. They're trying to close your file before you know how hurt you actually are. Once you sign, that's it. Done. You can't come back and say 'oh actually my shoulder needs surgery.'

    • 21
      quick-fox-569

      I used to work on the claims side and I'll be straight with you: when we moved fast on an offer, it was almost always because internal notes flagged the claim as having high-value potential. A commercial vehicle hitting a stopped car, pre-existing back condition that could now be aggravated, shoulder imaging already in play — that file has 'expensive' written all over it from their perspective. The quick offer is them trying to cut their losses early. Please don't sign anything yet.