The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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candid-mole-620

Hit someone at a light — my foot is numb and I'm panicking about what to do next

Hey everyone. First time posting anywhere like this so bear with me.

So two weeks ago I rear-ended someone at a red light. I wasn't going fast at all — traffic had slowed and I just misjudged the gap. The other car honestly looked fine, barely a scuff, but my front end took a decent hit.

Here's the thing that's really scaring me: since the accident I've had this weird numbness that keeps coming and going in my left foot. I didn't think much of it at first — figured it was just shock or adrenaline — but it's still happening and honestly getting a little worse. A friend is pushing me to see a neurologist but I don't even know if my insurance covers that.

Oh, and kind of a weird wrinkle — the car is technically still in the process of being transferred to me. I bought it recently, have everything signed, just haven't finished the registration paperwork yet. Not sure if that creates a problem with my claim.

I did spend a lot of time building out a solid insurance policy when I got it — good liability limits, decent medical payments coverage, the works. I thought I was covered for basically anything. But now that I'm actually in a situation, I have no idea how to handle it without getting steamrolled.

A few things I'm trying to figure out:

  • Does the registration gap actually matter for my coverage?
  • Should I be doing anything right now to protect myself medically and financially?
  • Is the other driver going to come after me even if their car looked fine?

Any advice from people who've been through this would mean a lot. I'm kind of spinning out.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 12
    wise-wren-117

    Oh man, the foot numbness thing — please don't wait on that. I ignored some weird tingling after my accident for like three weeks and it turned out to be a nerve issue that got way harder to treat because I waited. Go get checked out ASAP and make sure everything is documented in your medical records from the start. That paper trail matters more than you think.

  • 13
    genuine-grouse-547

    I want to second the urgency on the numbness. Neurological symptoms after any kind of impact — even a slow one — are not something to dismiss. It could be something minor like referred nerve compression, but it could also be something that needs prompt attention. Go to an urgent care or ER today if you haven't already, and specifically tell them about the accident and when the symptom started. Don't downplay it to the doctor. Let them decide what it is.

  • 23
    mellow-otter-872

    The registration gap is probably less of a problem than you're worried about — insurers generally care that you have an insurable interest in the vehicle and that it's listed on the policy, not whether the DMV paperwork is 100% finalized. That said, call your insurance company and give them a heads up about the timing. Don't hide it, don't volunteer a big explanation either, just mention it matter-of-factly. Adjusters notice when people are being weirdly evasive about simple stuff.

    Also: the other driver's car looking fine means nothing. Soft tissue and injury claims come in all the time on cars with barely a scratch. Just be aware.

    • 8
      clever-seal-974

      I just want to say — the fact that you're asking questions and trying to figure this out is a good thing. A lot of people just freeze. Please take care of yourself first though. The insurance stuff will still be there after you've seen a doctor.

    • 10
      tired-walker197

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 19
    brave-raven-213

    Whatever you do, be careful what you say to the adjuster. They're going to ask you to give a recorded statement and it's going to feel like a casual conversation. It is not casual. Every word gets used later. You don't have to be rude about it — just say you'd like to think through things before doing a recorded call. You have that right.

    • 1
      mellow-late-shift555

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

  • 15
    steady-lynx-169

    A few practical things worth doing right now if you haven't already:

    1. Start a folder — physical or digital — with everything related to this accident. Photos, the other driver's info, any texts or emails with your insurer, medical visit summaries, all of it. 2. Write down your account of what happened while it's fresh. Include road conditions, time of day, how fast you were going, anything. 3. Don't sign any releases from the other party's insurer without understanding exactly what you're signing. A release can close off your rights.

    Not legal advice, just stuff I've seen matter a lot later on.

    • 20
      hearty-stoat-264

      Honestly? Stop overthinking the car and the registration stuff — that's fixable. The foot thing is the only urgent issue here. Go get seen today. Everything else can wait 24 hours. The medical documentation you create right now is going to matter a lot if this turns into anything bigger down the road.

    • 7
      kind-traveler398

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

    • 6
      mellow-late-shift905

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 20
    hearty-wren-829

    The neurological symptom alone is a reason to at least have a free consult with a personal injury attorney before you get too deep into the claims process — especially since you were at fault and the other party may bring a claim against you. An attorney can help you understand what your policy actually covers for your own medical expenses (med-pay or PIP depending on your state) versus what's at risk on the liability side. Not legal advice, just worth a conversation.