The Shoulder
The Shoulder
67
Ridesharebright-swift-485

Got rear-ended in a rideshare — what are my next steps before I talk to insurance?

So this happened about five days ago and I'm still kind of shaken up about it. I (24M) was in the backseat of a rideshare heading home from work when the driver stopped at a yellow light and we got slammed from behind. Nothing felt catastrophic in the moment — I was mostly just startled — but by the next morning my neck was stiff and I had this dull ache across my upper back that still hasn't fully gone away.

The rideshare driver seemed fine, exchanged info with the other driver, and I filed an incident report through the app that same night. The other driver's insurance reached out to me yesterday and the rep was super friendly, almost too friendly, asking me to describe my symptoms and whether I'd seen a doctor yet. I kept it vague because something felt off about how fast they were moving.

I have an appointment with my GP on Thursday. I want to make sure I get properly checked out — maybe imaging if she thinks it's warranted — before I say anything definitive to the insurance company.

A few things I'm genuinely unsure about:

  • Should I even be talking to the other driver's insurance at all right now, or can I wait until after my doctor's visit?
  • Does the rideshare company's insurance also play a role here, or is it just the at-fault driver's policy?
  • I don't have a lawyer and wasn't planning to get one for something this minor, but is that naive?

I'm not trying to milk anything — I just don't want to accidentally sign something or say something that screws me over before I even know how bad the injury actually is. Any advice from people who've been through this would be really helpful.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 16
    cool-sparrow-190

    That 'super friendly' adjuster calling you fast is a huge red flag. They are NOT on your side — their entire job is to close your claim cheaply before you know the full extent of your injuries. Do not give a recorded statement, do not describe your symptoms in detail, and absolutely do not accept anything until you've finished all your medical treatment. Soft tissue injuries can linger or get worse for weeks.

  • 13
    mellow-mole-950

    Worked in claims for several years and I'll be straight with you — when we called injured parties quickly and acted super warm, we were hoping to get a recorded statement and a fast lowball settlement before you lawyered up or finished treating. You were right to keep it vague. You don't have to give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. You really don't. Your own insurer is a different story depending on your policy, but the at-fault carrier? You can decline until you're ready.

    • 10
      calm-parent688

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 18
    clever-dove-645

    Please don't skip that doctor's appointment or downplay your symptoms when you're there. Neck and upper back stiffness after a rear-end collision can sometimes be more than basic muscle soreness — things like ligament strain or early disc issues don't always show up as dramatic pain right away. Tell your GP exactly what happened and let her decide whether imaging is appropriate. Document everything.

    • 11
      mellow-otter-067

      I was in almost the exact same situation — backseat passenger, rear-end hit, felt 'fine-ish' at first. I made the mistake of telling the adjuster I was 'a little sore but okay' in that first call and it came back to bite me later when my PT visits added up. See your doctor first, get everything in writing, and don't characterize your injuries to anyone until you actually know what they are.

    • 1
      calm-passenger236

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 12
    steady-bison-607

    To answer your rideshare question — yes, there can be multiple insurance layers involved. Typically the at-fault driver's policy is primary, but rideshare companies carry their own liability coverage that can come into play depending on the driver's status at the time of the crash. It's worth making sure you understand which policy is actually covering what before you start negotiating anything. And you are not obligated to rush this process — statutes of limitations give you time, use it.

    • 19
      patient-sparrow-758

      Not legal advice, but a quick note: a lot of people assume 'minor' injuries don't warrant talking to a PI attorney. Most initial consultations are free, and an attorney can at least tell you whether the rideshare layer complicates things in your state. You might decide you don't need one — that's totally valid — but going in informed is better than guessing. The fact that there's a potential third-party rideshare policy involved is exactly the kind of thing worth a 20-minute free call about.

  • 18
    hearty-tern-324

    Three rules until your doctor clears you: don't give a recorded statement, don't sign anything, don't say you're 'fine.' That's it. Everything else can wait.

  • 14
    kind-owl-850

    I just want to say — it sounds like you're handling this really maturely and carefully. A lot of people would've just accepted the first offer to make the stress go away. Take care of yourself first, the claim stuff can follow.

    • 6
      grounded-sidewalk386

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?