The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Legal questionskind-swan-791

Just moved to a new city and got into a fender bender — how do I even find a good PI attorney here?

So I relocated for work about two months ago and honestly I'm still figuring out the roads. The highway interchanges here are no joke compared to where I grew up. Last week I got clipped merging onto the freeway — the other driver drifted into my lane and caught my rear quarter panel. Damage is pretty minor, no injuries beyond some neck stiffness that I'm keeping an eye on, and we exchanged info at the scene.

Here's the thing though — I don't know anyone in this city yet. Back home I had family friends, old neighbors, people I could just text and ask "hey do you know a good lawyer?" That network doesn't exist for me here.

I've been Googling but honestly the results feel overwhelming and a little sketchy — every result is just an ad. I'm not even sure I need an attorney for something this small, but the neck stiffness is making me nervous and I want to at least know my options before I talk to the insurance adjuster.

So I guess my questions are:

  • How do you actually vet a personal injury attorney in a city where you have no word-of-mouth?
  • Are there red flags I should watch out for when reaching out to firms?
  • Is it even worth consulting one for something that might just be a minor claim?

I'd rather do this homework now, even if I end up not needing anyone, than scramble later if the stiffness turns into something more serious. Any advice from people who've been through this would be genuinely appreciated.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    keen-swift-591

    The good news is you're asking this now while everything is fresh, not six months from now when deadlines are closing in and you've already said something to the adjuster you can't take back. You're ahead of most people who go through this, honestly.

    • 0
      weary-survivor970

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 18
    silent-bison-103

    Don't talk to the insurance adjuster before you at least do a free consult with an attorney. Seriously. Even if your claim ends up being small, adjusters are trained to get you on record saying things that minimize your injuries. The neck stiffness alone is reason enough to make a few calls first.

    • 7
      candid-hare-185

      For vetting attorneys without word-of-mouth: look for ones who specifically handle personal injury and motor vehicle cases (not general practitioners), check their state bar profile for any discipline history, and pay attention to whether they actually return your initial inquiry call themselves or farm it out to a call center. Most PI attorneys work on contingency so the consult should be free — if someone wants to charge you just to talk, that's a flag. Also, don't feel pressured to sign anything at a first meeting.

    • 0
      honest-traveler252

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 15
    clear-elk-543

    The moment you mention neck stiffness to the adjuster without any medical documentation to back it up, they're going to lowball you or drag their feet hoping you just go away. They're counting on the fact that you're new to the area and don't know the process. Please see a doctor first and get that stiffness on record before you say anything to the insurance company.

  • 15
    quick-tern-608

    Not legal advice, but to your question about whether it's worth consulting even for a minor claim — almost always yes, at least once. A consult costs you nothing in PI cases and gives you a clearer picture of what your claim might actually be worth once you factor in medical bills, lost time, and ongoing symptoms. The attorney will tell you honestly if it's too small to pursue. Better to know than to wonder. The neck stiffness is worth flagging regardless.

    • 8
      tired-neighbor226

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

  • 12
    hearty-marmot-260

    I was in almost the exact same situation when I moved cities a few years back — no local connections, no clue where to start. Honestly the best thing I did was look up state bar referral services. Most state bars have a lawyer referral program where you can get a short initial consult for little to nothing. It's not as good as a personal recommendation but it at least weeds out the random Google ad mills.

    • 12
      spry-kestrel-886

      I worked on the insurance side for a long time and I'll be straight with you: the first recorded statement is the one we built the whole file around. Whatever you say in that call gets locked in. If you later say your neck got worse, we'd go back to that recording and use it against you. I'm not saying your claim isn't valid — I'm saying the process is set up to protect the company, not you. Talk to an attorney first. It changes the entire dynamic of how your file gets handled.

  • 7
    quick-stoat-827

    Just chiming in on the medical side — neck stiffness after an impact can be soft tissue stuff that lingers for weeks or even months, or it can be something worth imaging. Don't wait until it gets worse to see someone. A lot of people brush it off and then three weeks later they're in real pain and scrambling to prove it's related to the accident. Get seen now, document everything.

  • 5
    bright-otter-912

    Quick question — did you file a police report at the scene? And did you take photos of the damage and the other car? That stuff matters a lot down the line if your stiffness turns into a real injury claim. Just want to make sure you have your bases covered before you even get to the attorney search.

    • 4
      kind-survivor879

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