The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswarm-heron-267

Handled my accident claim solo for months… here's what I wish someone told me earlier

So I'm a pretty independent person. When the crash happened I genuinely thought — okay, I'll just call the insurance company, get my car fixed, done. Easy. I've handled hard things before, I don't need to bring anyone else in.

Spoiler: it was NOT easy.

The first few weeks were fine-ish. Then the medical bills started arriving from like four different places — the ER, the radiologist, the ambulance, separately?? Nobody warned me about that. Meanwhile the other driver's insurance kept calling me asking for recorded statements and I just… answered everything because why wouldn't I? I had nothing to hide.

Then my own insurer started asking questions too and I realized I had no idea which conversations I was even supposed to be having or what I was agreeing to.

A friend finally pushed me to at least talk to an attorney. I kept resisting because I assumed it would cost me upfront or be this whole complicated thing. Turns out the consultation was free and they work on contingency so nothing out of pocket.

Honestly the biggest thing wasn't even the legal stuff — it was just having someone finally explain what was actually happening at each step. I stopped dreading every phone call. I stopped lying awake wondering if I'd accidentally screwed myself.

I guess my question for this community is: how many of you tried to go it alone first? Did you feel like you left something on the table? Or did going solo actually work out fine for you? Genuinely curious because I wonder if I'm the only one who underestimated all of this.

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14 replies

  • 18
    calm-crow-497

    Not trying to be harsh but genuinely curious — did the attorney actually change your outcome or did it just make you feel better about the process? Because sometimes people assume having representation automatically means a bigger result and that's not always the case. What's your situation looking like now compared to what was originally offered?

    • 19
      plain-hare-314

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this generally: the cases where people hurt themselves most by going solo aren't usually the obvious ones. It's the stuff like giving that early recorded statement, missing a deadline they didn't know existed, or settling before they actually know the full extent of their injuries. Once you settle, that's it — you can't go back. That finality is worth understanding before you sign anything. Talk to someone first.

    • 2
      mellow-sidewalk714

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 11
    cool-mole-102

    That recorded statement thing is HUGE and nobody talks about it enough. Adjusters are trained to call you early — like, within a day or two — specifically because you're still shaken up, you don't have all your medical info yet, and you're more likely to downplay your injuries without meaning to. Once that recording exists, they will use it. Please tell me you hadn't already given one before you got help.

  • 11
    genuine-crow-853

    I'll be honest with you because I used to sit on the other side of this. When someone calls in unrepresented, the file gets handled differently than when an attorney is involved. That's just the reality. It's not always malicious — it's workload, it's how reserves get set, it's a dozen small things. But the outcomes can be really different. Getting someone in your corner earlier than you think you need them is almost always worth it.

    • 19
      warm-marmot-383

      The multi-provider billing thing you mentioned catches so many people off guard. ER visit = hospital bill + separate physician group bill + radiology bill + potentially an anesthesiology bill if anything was done. Each one can independently send you to collections if it's not handled. Part of what a PI attorney's office does is track all of that and make sure it gets addressed in the settlement so you're not paying out of pocket after the fact. It's not glamorous work but it matters a lot.

  • 9
    cool-finch-814

    I just want to say it takes guts to admit you were in over your head. A lot of people would just stay quiet and hope it worked out. The fact that you caught it and got help is what matters. Hope you're physically doing okay on top of all this stress 💙

    • 7
      clear-heron-361

      Short answer: yes, a lot of people go it alone and yes, a lot of them get less than they should. Free consultation, contingency fee, no real downside to at least asking. You already figured that out. For anyone reading this who hasn't yet — just make the call.

    • 1
      kind-parent699

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

  • 8
    brave-wren-254

    Also — and this is the part I care about — please make sure you're not skipping follow-up appointments or PT because you're stressed about cost or logistics. I've seen people power through injuries that needed real treatment, and then months later they're dealing with something that got way worse. Your recovery should be the priority, and documentation of that treatment matters legally too, so it's genuinely both things at once.

  • 7
    quick-lynx-201

    Oh man, yes. I did the exact same thing — answered every call, gave a recorded statement within like 48 hours of my accident because the adjuster made it sound completely routine. Only found out later that I probably said things that hurt me. You are definitely not alone in this.

    • 10
      steady-wanderer100

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

    • 7
      level-co-pilot382

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

  • 5
    cool-stoat-974

    Here's the thing though — you caught it. You didn't wait until after you'd already signed a release or something. Whatever happened before you got help, you still have the ability to protect yourself going forward. That's genuinely the best position to be in given where you started.