The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Legal questionssteady-raven-448

Has anyone here actually hired a PI lawyer after a crash, or is it overkill?

So I got rear-ended about three weeks ago at a stoplight — nothing catastrophic, airbags didn't even go off, but my neck and upper back have been stiff and achey ever since. The other driver's insurance accepted liability pretty quickly, which I thought was a good sign, but now their adjuster keeps calling me every other day asking how I'm feeling and dropping hints about "wrapping things up."

I've never sued anyone in my life and honestly the word "lawsuit" makes me nervous. I always assumed you only get a lawyer involved if things went really sideways. But a coworker told me she talked to one after her fender-bender and it didn't cost her anything upfront, and she ended up way better off than if she'd just taken the first offer.

My questions for anyone who's been through this:

  • Did you hire a lawyer, and do you think it was worth it?
  • Is there any downside to at least talking to one, even if I decide not to move forward?
  • That adjuster calling me constantly — is that normal or should I be reading into it?

I'm not trying to be greedy or milk anything. I just don't want to sign something and then find out in six months my back still isn't right and I have zero recourse. The aches feel minor right now but my doctor said soft tissue stuff can linger.

Any real experiences would genuinely help. I'm flying blind here.

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 10
    bold-marmot-279

    Ugh, the constant adjuster calls after my accident drove me crazy too. In my experience that pressure to "wrap things up" fast is a huge red flag. I talked to a PI attorney just to see what they'd say — consultation was free, zero pressure — and I'm really glad I did. I had no idea how much I was about to leave on the table.

    • 21
      candid-newt-876

      Please don't underestimate neck and upper back strain from a rear-end impact. I see patients all the time who felt "mostly okay" in the first few weeks and then hit a wall around week six or eight when inflammation really sets in. Make sure you're documenting every symptom with your doctor and going to your appointments consistently. That paper trail matters a lot down the road, whether you have a lawyer or not.

  • 14
    clever-otter-894

    That adjuster calling you every other day asking how you feel? That's not them being nice. They're building a record so they can say you told them you were "doing better" and lowball or deny you later. Do not give them casual injury updates over the phone. Seriously. You can be polite but keep it short — "still treating, nothing resolved yet" — and leave it at that.

  • 14
    bright-heron-506

    I used to work on the claims side, so I'll be straight with you: when liability is accepted quickly and an adjuster starts calling repeatedly early on, there's usually a strategic reason for it. They want a recorded statement or a quick release before you really know the extent of your injuries. Soft tissue claims that settle fast almost always settle for less than they're worth. I'm not saying go file a lawsuit — just saying don't rush.

    • 8
      clever-vole-716

      Not legal advice, but: consulting a PI attorney costs you nothing in most cases because they work on contingency. The consult is usually free too. The question of whether to hire one isn't really "am I planning to sue" — it's more about having someone in your corner who knows how claims are valued and won't let you sign a release before your treatment is finished. At minimum, one conversation can help you ask the right questions. Up to you what you do after that.

    • 17
      quick-newt-126

      One thing people don't realize: once you sign a release and take a settlement, that's it — you can't go back even if you need surgery two months later. That's why most attorneys will tell you not to settle until you've reached what's called "maximum medical improvement," meaning your doctors have a clearer picture of where you'll end up. You're only three weeks out — way too early to be closing anything.

  • 9
    candid-tern-448

    The fact that you're asking these questions instead of just signing whatever they send you honestly shows good instincts. Please just talk to a lawyer before you do anything. It can't hurt and it sounds like you're already feeling pressured.

    • 9
      gentle-passenger389

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 15
    silent-seal-233

    Stop answering the adjuster's calls without knowing your rights first. Talk to a PI attorney this week — free consult, no commitment. If after that you decide to handle it yourself, fine, but at least you'll know what you're dealing with. Right now you're negotiating without knowing the rules of the game.

    • 8
      honest-driver327

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 17
    curious-sparrow-336

    The good news is you caught this early enough that you still have all your options open. You haven't signed anything, you're still treating, and you're asking smart questions. That's genuinely the best position to be in. A lot of people only start asking this stuff after they've already accepted a lowball offer.

    • 5
      careful-wanderer533

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.