The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
Medical & injuriesquick-hare-956

Insurance wants to 'discuss' my injury claim after the at-fault driver had the same carrier — what does that mean?

So back in the spring I was rear-ended pretty hard on the highway. My teenage son was in the passenger seat. We both got taken away by EMS — he had a neck strain and I ended up with a mild concussion plus a messed-up shoulder that I'm still doing PT for. The other driver got cited at the scene, total liability on their end, no dispute there.

Property damage side got sorted out first. They offered me way less than what two body shops quoted. I pushed back, sent the estimates, and eventually got a little more — still not enough to actually replace what I had, but I was exhausted and just wanted the car thing done. Lesson learned, I guess.

Now the same insurance company (yes, the at-fault driver carries the same insurer I do — kind of weird and uncomfortable) is reaching out and saying they want to set up a call to "go over the remaining elements of my claim." I'm guessing that means pain and suffering, medical bills, maybe lost wages since I missed almost two weeks of work.

Here's what I'm not sure about:

  • Is this call just them feeling out whether I'll take a quick settlement or sue?
  • Should I even talk to them before figuring out if I need a lawyer?
  • Does the fact that we share an insurer create any kind of conflict of interest?

My injuries aren't catastrophic but they're real and ongoing. I don't want to get lowballed on the injury side the same way I feel like I did on the car. Anyone been through something like this? What should I know going in?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 8
    daring-tern-399

    That call is 100% them sizing you up. They want to know if you're represented, how badly you're hurting, and whether you'll take a fast check to go away. Do NOT tell them your symptoms are "getting better" or downplay anything. Adjusters are trained to find phrases they can use against you later.

    • 8
      honest-walker997

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 6
    gentle-stoat-926

    I used to work claims and honestly that 'let's chat about the remaining elements' call is a soft probe. They're hoping you'll give them a recorded statement before you know what your treatment is going to cost long-term. If your PT isn't done yet, you don't even know your full damages. There's no urgency on your end — the statute of limitations gives you time. Don't rush.

    • 2
      grounded-co-pilot624

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 17
    wise-owl-545

    The shared insurer thing is worth paying attention to. Technically they have to handle both sides of the claim, but their financial interest is in paying out as little as possible overall. It's not illegal but it absolutely creates a weird dynamic. A lot of people in your situation at least do a free consult with a PI attorney before accepting anything on the injury side — just to understand what they might actually be entitled to.

    • 14
      careful-beaver-513

      Not legal advice, but I'll say this: accepting the property damage offer typically doesn't waive your injury claim, since they're handled separately. What you want to avoid is signing any broad release that lumps everything together. Before that call, it would be worth knowing whether they're going to ask you to sign anything afterward. A free consult with a personal injury attorney costs you nothing and at least tells you where you stand. Just my general take.

    • 13
      quiet-kestrel-083

      I went through almost this exact thing last year — same insurer on both sides, rear-end collision, soft tissue stuff that dragged on. I made the mistake of taking that early call and basically talked myself into a lower offer because I was optimistic about my recovery. Took way longer than I thought and I wish I'd waited until I had a clearer picture from my doctor. Hang tight if you can.

    • 1
      mellow-overpass164

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

  • 7
    bold-fox-845

    Please don't settle the injury portion until your doctors have told you what your recovery actually looks like. Shoulder injuries especially can linger or require additional treatment — sometimes imaging doesn't catch everything right away. If there's any chance you need more PT, injections, or down the road something more serious, you want that factored in before you close out the claim.

    • 10
      kind-parent381

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

    • 0
      plainspoken-overpass608

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

  • 7
    clever-seal-636

    Ugh, this sounds so stressful on top of already dealing with recovery. The fact that your son was hurt too just makes it worse. Please don't feel pressured to jump at whatever they offer — take your time and look out for both of you.

    • 9
      steady-passenger843

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

  • 6
    bright-beaver-380

    Short version: don't take that call alone without knowing your rights first. Get a free consult with a PI lawyer — most do them at no charge. You already got less than you wanted on the car; don't repeat that on the part that actually matters more.