The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
Legal questionskind-lynx-660

Never dealt with a PI lawyer before — is it too soon to call one?

So about three weeks ago I got rear-ended at a red light. The damage to my car looked pretty minor at first and I figured I'd just let the insurance process play out. No big deal, right?

Except now my upper back has been aching nonstop and I've been getting these tension headaches that I definitely did not have before. Went to urgent care and they told me it's likely soft tissue stuff, but to follow up if it doesn't improve. It hasn't.

Meanwhile the other driver's insurance keeps calling me asking questions and being weirdly friendly about everything — which honestly makes me more nervous, not less. My own insurer hasn't been much more helpful either. I feel like I'm just... floating.

I've never hired any kind of lawyer in my life. I always assumed you only called a PI attorney if you were, like, seriously hurt or had massive bills piling up. But people keep telling me I should at least talk to one now, before I accidentally say the wrong thing to an adjuster or sign something I shouldn't.

Is that actually true? Is it normal to reach out this early, before you even know how bad the injury is going to get? Or does calling a lawyer this soon make things more complicated than they need to be?

Just want to handle this the right way from the jump. Any experience here would be really helpful.

10replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

10 replies

  • 20
    bold-owl-580

    That "weirdly friendly" adjuster calling you repeatedly? That's a tactic. They want you relaxed and talking before you know the full picture of your injuries. Soft tissue stuff can take weeks to fully show up on imaging. Do not give them a recorded statement. Do not. I cannot stress that enough.

    • 7
      cool-owl-426

      Please keep going to follow-up appointments and document everything. Soft tissue injuries and post-impact headaches are real and they can linger or get worse. The medical paper trail you build right now matters a lot — both for your health and for any claim later. Don't skip appointments just because you feel "okay-ish" on a good day.

    • 15
      clever-swift-495

      The fact that you're asking these questions now — three weeks in, before signing anything — actually puts you in a much better position than a lot of people. Most folks don't start thinking about this until they've already made a few mistakes. You've got time to do this right.

  • 15
    silent-swift-444

    Ugh, this sounds so stressful — dealing with the pain AND the insurance runaround at the same time. Please don't go through this alone. Even just talking to someone who knows this process seems like it would take a huge weight off. Wishing you a speedy recovery 💙

    • 0
      gentle-driver764

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

  • 13
    daring-fox-665

    Stop answering the other insurance company's calls until you've at least had one conversation with a PI attorney. That's it. That's the advice. You can always decide not to hire anyone after the consult, but you can't un-say things you've already told an adjuster.

  • 9
    humble-crow-657

    Honestly, call now. I waited about six weeks after my accident before I talked to anyone and I had already given a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. My attorney later told me that statement made things harder than they needed to be. You're not obligated to hire anyone just because you have a consultation — most of them are free anyway.

  • 9
    curious-raven-234

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be straight with you — when we were calling injury claimants early and often, it wasn't out of genuine concern. It was to get information and ideally a quick, low settlement before the person knew what they were dealing with. The friendliness is part of the process. Talking to a PI attorney costs you nothing at the consult stage and at least gives you some context for what's happening.

    • 10
      quiet-otter-007

      There's a concept called the statute of limitations — basically a deadline to file any legal claim — and it varies by state, but that's not even your most urgent concern right now. Your most urgent concern is that anything you say to an adjuster can be used to minimize your claim. A free PI consultation just helps you understand your options. You don't have to commit to anything. Most attorneys won't even take a case they don't think has merit, so the consult itself is pretty low-stakes for you.

  • 7
    tidy-otter-946

    Not trying to be dismissive, but a few questions worth thinking through: Did you get a police report filed? Did you photograph the scene and the damage? Have you kept any record of your symptoms — like written notes or messages to friends about the pain? These details matter a lot if things escalate. The more documentation you have from the start, the better off you'll be regardless of whether you hire anyone.