The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
Legal questionssilent-sparrow-407

Got a settlement offer 10 days after my crash — before I even had an MRI. Should I be worried?

Still kind of in shock about all of this honestly. I was T-boned at an intersection about two weeks ago — not my fault, the other driver ran a red light and there are witnesses plus a traffic cam. My car is basically scrap metal at this point.

I've been going to urgent care and my regular doctor for shoulder and lower back pain. They ordered imaging but I haven't even had my MRI appointment yet, so nobody actually knows the full extent of what's going on inside my body.

Here's the thing that's freaking me out: the at-fault driver's insurance company called me THREE times this week and today they emailed a formal settlement offer. It's not nothing, but it also feels really low given that I don't even have a diagnosis yet, I'm still in pain daily, and I had to rent a car out of pocket while mine gets sorted out.

Why are they moving so fast? Is this normal? My gut says something feels off — like they're trying to get me to sign something before I find out how bad my injuries actually are. But I also wonder if I'm being paranoid and this is just how it works.

Has anyone else gotten an early offer like this? Did you take it, push back, or just ignore it? I genuinely don't know what the right move is here and I don't want to accidentally close the door on something I'll regret later.

Any thoughts appreciated — even just knowing others have been through this would help.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    spry-dove-174

    From a medical standpoint — soft tissue injuries and certain spinal issues can take weeks to fully present or show up clearly on imaging. You are way too early in the process to know what your recovery is going to look like, how long it'll take, or whether you'll need specialist care or procedures down the road. Future medical costs are a real thing and they should absolutely be factored into any settlement. Don't let anyone rush that process.

    • 15
      candid-bison-059

      The legal concept here is called 'maximum medical improvement' — basically the point where your doctors say your condition has stabilized and they have a clearer sense of long-term impact. Most attorneys won't even begin serious settlement negotiations until you hit that point, because until then nobody actually knows the full value of your claim. Medical bills, lost wages, future treatment costs, pain and suffering — none of that can be accurately calculated this early. The insurance company knows this, which is exactly why they're offering now.

  • 20
    patient-wren-243

    Ugh this is so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with this on top of recovering. Please don't let them pressure you into anything. The fact that they're calling so many times already feels pushy and honestly a little predatory. Take your time, get your MRI, talk to someone who knows this stuff before you make any decisions.

  • 19
    curious-raven-709

    Quick question — did you actually read what the release language says, or just the dollar amount? Sometimes people panic about the number without realizing the release wording is the real thing that matters. Also, have you talked to your own auto insurance at all? Depending on your policy you might have coverage and resources you don't even know about yet.

  • 10
    quiet-crow-497

    Your gut is 100% correct. They are not calling you three times a week because they care about you. They want you to sign before that MRI comes back showing something serious. Once you settle and sign a release, it is OVER — you cannot go back even if you find out six months later you needed surgery. Do not sign a single thing right now.

    • 15
      gentle-lynx-951

      Almost identical thing happened to me after a crash last year. I got an offer before I even finished my first round of physical therapy. I made the mistake of accepting because I was overwhelmed and needed the cash. Turned out I had a herniated disc that didn't fully show up until later imaging, and there was nothing I could do about it legally because I'd already signed the release. Please wait until you have a complete picture of your injuries.

  • 10
    humble-fox-424

    I used to work on the other side of this. Here's what's actually happening: adjusters have settlement targets and closing claims fast looks great on their performance metrics. An early lowball offer costs the company very little because a huge percentage of people just accept it — they're stressed, they need money, and they don't realize they're leaving a lot on the table. The speed is a feature, not a courtesy. They are banking on you not knowing what your case is actually worth yet.

    • 11
      brave-beaver-406

      Not legal advice, but this pattern is extremely common and there's a straightforward reason for it: insurers profit by closing claims cheaply and quickly. They have no obligation to tell you what your claim might actually be worth — that's not their job. Their job is to protect their policyholder and their own bottom line. Speaking with a personal injury attorney before responding to any offer is almost always worth the time, especially when liability seems clear and injuries are still being evaluated.

    • 8
      hopeful-wanderer101

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

    • 8
      thankful-backseat681

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 9
    keen-fox-518

    Don't take it. Don't call them back without knowing what you're doing. At minimum, get a free consultation with a PI attorney before you respond to anything. Most do free consults and work on contingency so it costs you nothing to get informed. You can always settle later — you cannot un-settle.