The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbright-vole-824

Got rear-ended at a red light, woke up stiff and achy — what do I do first?

So this happened two days ago and I'm still trying to wrap my head around the order of things.

I was sitting completely still at a red light when someone rolled into the back of my car. Didn't seem super hard at the time — I mostly felt annoyed, not hurt. We pulled into a nearby parking lot, exchanged info, and an officer came out and wrote everything up. When they asked if I was hurt I honestly said I didn't feel anything yet.

Fast forward to yesterday morning: I wake up and my neck and upper back are just... tight and sore in this weird way. Not screaming pain, but definitely not normal. Kind of like I slept wrong for three nights in a row, except I didn't.

Here's where I'm confused:

  • Do I go to a doctor before I contact the at-fault driver's insurance, or after?
  • If I go to the doctor now, do I pay out of pocket, use my health insurance, or somehow bill it to the car insurance?
  • My own insurer told me I can run the whole thing through them and they'll deal with the other side — is that actually easier or does it complicate things?
  • I still haven't called the other driver's insurance at all. Is waiting a few days already a problem?

I've never dealt with any of this before. I don't want to be dramatic about what might just be normal soreness, but I also don't want to accidentally tank my options if it turns out something is actually wrong. Any advice from people who've been through this would really help.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 15
    keen-elk-572

    How fast do you think the other driver was going when they hit you? And did you notice any headrest adjustment or seat position stuff that might have affected how the impact hit you? I ask because the degree of vehicle damage versus the injury claim is something insurers scrutinize a lot, and it helps to have a realistic sense of what you're dealing with before you go in.

    • 4
      soft-spoken-late-shift899

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 19
    plain-stoat-678

    I was in almost the exact same situation last year — low speed hit, felt fine at the scene, woke up two days later barely able to turn my head. The thing I wish someone had told me: go to a doctor first, before you talk to the other side's insurance. Like, today if you can. Urgent care works if you can't get your regular doctor quickly. You want your symptoms documented with a timestamp, because insurance companies absolutely look at how long you waited.

    • 21
      silent-otter-484

      The delayed soreness you're describing is really common after rear-end collisions, even minor ones. Your body was braced and then jolted, and soft tissue inflammation takes 24-48 hours to really show up. That doesn't mean it's serious, but it does mean it's real and worth getting evaluated. Make sure when you go in you describe exactly when it started and what the accident was — that context matters for how they document it.

    • 20
      warm-raven-435

      Not legal advice, but: the sequence that tends to protect people in your situation is (1) get medical attention and get documented, (2) let the medical picture become clearer before settling anything, (3) be cautious about early recorded statements. A lot of PI attorneys offer free consults and can at least explain your state's rules around this stuff. Worth a call even if you end up not needing one.

    • 7
      kind-rider191

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 7
    mellow-raven-820

    Do NOT call the at-fault driver's insurance and just casually describe how you're feeling. They will record that call and use anything you say to minimize your claim later. Seriously, adjusters are trained to get you to downplay symptoms in the first conversation. Get checked out medically first, and think carefully about what you say and when.

  • 15
    bright-wolf-064

    Former adjuster here. A gap between the accident and when you first saw a doctor is one of the first things we'd flag when reviewing a claim — it was used to argue the injury wasn't related to the crash. That's not always fair, but it's real. Two days isn't a disaster, but don't let it stretch into a week. Also, on the 'run it through your own insurer' question: that can genuinely be easier to navigate since you have an existing relationship with them, but they will likely subrogate against the at-fault carrier anyway. Either path can work.

    • 9
      bright-marten-018

      Please just go get checked out. I know it feels like maybe you're overreacting, but you're not — you were in a crash and now you're hurting. Even if it turns out to be nothing serious, having it on record protects you. And honestly, peace of mind is worth the copay.

  • 20
    curious-crow-724

    A few practical things: (1) Don't give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance without thinking it through first — you're usually not legally required to at this stage. (2) Keep every receipt and document every appointment related to this. (3) On the billing question, your health insurance can be used for treatment now, and car insurance/liability coverage can potentially reimburse or be sorted out later — but the specifics depend on your state and your policy. It's worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you start talking to adjusters, especially since you have ongoing symptoms.

    • 15
      keen-stoat-892

      Here's the simple version: see a doctor today, describe everything honestly, get it in writing. Don't sign or agree to anything from any insurance company yet. Don't post about this on social media. That's really it for right now — the rest can wait a couple days, the doctor visit cannot.