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Legal questionsquick-marten-980

How do you actually find a good PI attorney after a crash? Felt totally lost

So it's been about six weeks since I got rear-ended at a red light by someone who blew through the intersection, and honestly the legal side of this has been way more overwhelming than the physical recovery. My neck is still messed up, I'm going to PT twice a week, and on top of all that I'm supposed to somehow find a lawyer I can actually trust?

I had zero idea where to start. I googled a few names and got bombarded with billboard-lawyer vibes — you know the type, giant ads, 1-800 numbers, feels like a factory. That didn't feel right for my situation.

What actually helped me:

  • Asking in communities like this one. Real people who've been through it gave me way more useful signals than any ad.
  • Looking up reviews on multiple platforms, not just one. Patterns matter — if someone keeps getting mentioned as "hard to reach" that's a red flag.
  • The free consult is a test. I did consults with three different attorneys. One barely let me finish a sentence. One was clearly reading off a script. The third actually asked follow-up questions about my situation and explained what the process might look like for my case specifically. That's the one I went with.
  • Contingency fee clarity. I made sure I understood exactly what percentage they'd take and under what circumstances before signing anything.

I'm still early in the process but I already feel like having someone handle the insurance back-and-forth is lifting a huge weight off me. Has anyone else gone through the process of finding the right attorney? What worked or didn't work for you?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 22
    plain-swift-902

    Spent years on the insurance side before switching careers and I can tell you — claims without attorneys attached get handled very differently internally. Not saying that to scare you, just being honest. When a represented claimant comes in with organized documentation and a lawyer who knows the process, the whole tone of the file changes. The consult-shopping approach you described is smart. The right fit matters.

  • 18
    quiet-fox-620

    Honestly the fact that you didn't just take the first offer or go with the first lawyer you found shows a lot of self-advocacy. A lot of people freeze after an accident and just let things happen to them. The extra legwork you did upfront is probably going to pay off down the line — both in terms of your settlement and just feeling less anxious about the whole process.

  • 17
    careful-vole-664

    A couple of practical things worth knowing: most personal injury attorneys work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing upfront and they take a percentage only if you recover something. That percentage can sometimes be negotiated, especially if your case is relatively straightforward. Also, ask during your consult who will actually be working your file — sometimes you meet a senior attorney but a junior associate handles everything day-to-day. Not always bad, but worth knowing going in.

  • 17
    wise-vole-224

    Six weeks out and still in PT twice a week — that's a lot to be dealing with. I'm glad you're taking the legal stuff seriously and not just letting it slide. Some people I know just accepted whatever the insurance offered because they were exhausted and wanted it over. Make sure you're giving yourself time to actually know the full extent of your injuries before anything gets settled.

    • 0
      weary-survivor251

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 12
    swift-finch-229

    Whatever you do, don't let the other driver's insurance adjuster pressure you into settling before you even have a lawyer. They may call you sounding super friendly and reasonable, but they are not on your side. Their job is to close your claim as cheaply as possible. Get representation first, then talk to them — or better yet, let your attorney handle all of it.

  • 12
    genuine-vole-706

    Not legal advice, but the instinct to do multiple consultations is genuinely one of the best things an accident victim can do. Beyond credentials and reviews, pay attention to how well they explain things without jargon — that communication style in a consult usually reflects how they'll keep you informed throughout the case. Also, if your injuries are still evolving (like ongoing PT suggests), a good attorney will typically advise waiting until you reach maximum medical improvement before resolving a claim, so you know the full picture of damages.

  • 10
    steady-beaver-741

    Please make sure you're keeping detailed records of every PT appointment, every symptom, every day you had to miss work or couldn't do normal activities because of your neck. Your attorney will need this, but honestly it also helps you track your own recovery. A lot of people underreport their pain levels because they don't want to seem dramatic — don't do that. Accurate documentation matters both medically and legally.

  • 6
    quick-elk-745

    The free consult thing is SO real. I went through four before I found someone who didn't make me feel like a number. Trust your gut in that first conversation — if they're already dismissive before you've even hired them, it only gets worse.

    • 2
      calm-dreamer703

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 6
    candid-crow-260

    Curious — when you say you felt like the third attorney was asking about your situation specifically, what kinds of questions were they asking? I'm trying to figure out what actually separates a genuinely engaged attorney from one who's just better at performing engagement during a sales pitch.

    • 8
      careful-driver268

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 3
    cool-otter-782

    Three consults minimum. Don't let anyone rush you into signing a retainer the same day you walk in. A decent attorney understands you need time to decide.

    • 1
      weary-driver483

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?