The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Medical & injurieshumble-finch-899

Literally got rear-ended on my first solo drive with a new car — other driver now claiming injuries??

I'm still kind of in shock and could really use some outside perspective because I feel like I'm being set up.

About three weeks ago I got rear-ended at a red light. Full stop, no warning, just — wham. The guy who hit me was on his phone (his words, not mine — he literally admitted it at the scene). We pulled over, swapped info, took pictures, the whole thing. He was fine, walking around, chatting, even apologized twice.

Fast forward to last week: I get a call from his insurance saying he's now filing a bodily injury claim. Neck and back pain apparently. No ambulance was called that day. He drove himself away. I have a photo of him leaning against his car scrolling his phone while we waited for the non-emergency police line.

My car has a cracked bumper cover and some crushed plastic underneath — definitely not nothing, but his car is a full-size pickup and mine is a small hatchback, so the height mismatch meant most of the force went into my trunk. I went to urgent care two days later for my own soreness (which I'm honestly still dealing with), but I didn't even think to make a big deal out of it.

Now I'm second-guessing everything. Should I have filed against him for my own injuries? Am I going to be on the hook for his fake whiplash? My insurance assigned me an adjuster but she's been weirdly vague about what comes next.

Has anyone dealt with this kind of situation where the at-fault driver suddenly "gets hurt" after the fact? I feel completely turned around.

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10 replies

  • 18
    genuine-beaver-249

    Worked claims for years — late-reported injury claims after minor rear-ends are extremely common and honestly a mixed bag. Some are legitimate (soft tissue pain really can show up days later), and some are opportunistic. What insurers look at is the damage profile, the police report, any witness statements, and whether medical treatment is consistent with the mechanism of injury. Your photo of him on his phone post-accident is genuinely useful context. Make sure your adjuster has it.

  • 16
    calm-finch-072

    Not doubting you, but a couple of things I'd want to know more about: How fast was he going when he hit you? And when you say 'crushed plastic underneath' — did you get a repair estimate? The damage profile is going to matter a lot if this goes anywhere, and 'cracked bumper' can mean very different things depending on the actual impact speed.

    • 4
      gentle-optimist542

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 13
    keen-elk-327

    The other driver's insurance reaching out to you directly is a red flag. They're not your friend. Anything you say to them can be used to minimize your own claim or maximize his. I'd strongly suggest routing everything through your own adjuster and not giving recorded statements to the opposing carrier without understanding what you're agreeing to first.

    • 8
      silent-seal-098

      Two things you need to do right now: (1) Write down everything you remember about the scene while it's still fresh — his demeanor, exact words, what he was doing after. (2) Stop being vague with your adjuster. She's vague because you probably haven't pushed. Ask her directly: 'Is my policy covering his claim, and what is my exposure here?' Make her give you a real answer.

  • 12
    bright-lynx-837

    Not legal advice, but: you may have your own valid injury claim here that you haven't pursued yet. Urgent care records and the timing of your symptoms could matter. The fact that he's filing against you doesn't mean you can't also file against him — these things aren't mutually exclusive. Might be worth a free consult just to understand where you stand. Don't let his claim be the only story being told.

    • 5
      steady-neighbor169

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

  • 10
    spry-stoat-923

    I just want to gently say — please don't ignore your own soreness just because you feel like it's not 'bad enough.' Soft tissue injuries from rear-end impacts are sneaky. Go back in if things aren't improving, get it properly documented, and follow any treatment recommendations. Your health matters here, not just the legal stuff.

  • 9
    keen-mole-728

    Oh this is infuriatingly familiar. The guy who hit me did almost the same thing — totally fine at the scene, shook my hand, then three weeks later his attorney sent a letter to my insurer. What I learned the hard way: document everything from your side, including your own urgent care visit. That timestamp matters more than you'd think.

  • 6
    calm-otter-648

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The whiplash-after-the-fact thing feels so unfair especially when you're the one who actually got hurt. Please take care of yourself physically through all of this — the legal stuff will eventually sort out but your body needs attention too.