The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswise-fox-497

Nobody told me how to actually GET my police report after the accident — what do you do while waiting?

So I got rear-ended at a stoplight about a week ago. The officer who responded was totally fine, took everyone's info, gave me a little slip with an incident number on it, and told me the report would be 'ready in a few days.' That was it. No report, no timeline, nothing.

I've called the non-emergency line twice since then and both times I basically got 'it's still processing, check back later.' My insurance adjuster has already opened the claim and says the incident number is enough for now, but they made it pretty clear they're going to want the actual report at some point.

Meanwhile I'm just sitting here not sure what I'm supposed to be doing. Like, do I just keep calling every other day until someone tells me it's ready? Is there a way to check online? I've seen some third-party sites that claim to pull police reports but I don't know if those are legit or if they charge you for something you could get for free.

Also — does it actually matter that much if the report has some things wrong or missing? The officer didn't really talk to me much at the scene and I'm low-key worried the narrative might only reflect what the other driver said. Should I be doing anything right now to protect myself before I even see what's in it?

Just trying to figure out the normal process here because nobody explains this stuff to you when you're standing on the side of the road in shock. Any help appreciated.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 16
    tidy-grouse-194

    A few things worth knowing here. First, most jurisdictions charge a small fee for the official copy of the report — usually you can request it in person, by mail, or sometimes through a third-party service the department has partnered with (LexisNexis and a couple others have legit contracts with police departments nationwide, so those aren't always sketchy). Second — and this matters — if you think the report might be incomplete or one-sided, you can often submit a written statement to the department to be attached to the file. Not every department allows amendments, but a written supplement from you is usually accepted. Do that sooner rather than later while your memory is fresh.

    • 7
      careful-crow-458

      Don't assume the report will say what actually happened. I've seen people get blindsided when the report only reflects the other driver's version because the officer spent five minutes with them and two minutes with you. Before that report even comes out, write down everything YOU remember — road conditions, what you saw in your mirror, where the impact was, all of it. Timestamp it somehow. Your own contemporaneous notes matter more than people think, especially if the report turns out to be incomplete.

  • 15
    humble-bison-321

    Ugh this sounds so stressful on top of already dealing with the accident itself. You'd think they'd at least give you a basic info sheet about how to get the report, but apparently that's too much to ask 😅 Hope it comes through quickly for you and that everything checks out okay.

    • 21
      curious-tern-712

      Not legal advice, but — your instinct to be proactive about potential errors in the report is the right instinct. If there are factual inaccuracies once you get it, most departments have a formal process to request a supplement or correction. Also, the report isn't the only evidence of what happened; photos, witness contact info, and your own written account all matter. If the other driver is disputing fault or you were injured, it might be worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you sign anything with the insurance company.

    • 0
      kind-walker579

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

    • 4
      soft-spoken-sidewalk298

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 13
    tidy-beaver-103

    Call the records division directly — not the general non-emergency line. Ask specifically for the records or report division and ask them what their average turnaround is right now and whether they have online lookup. Most departments have one, people just don't know to look. Also take photos of that incident number slip they gave you in case you ever need to prove when the report was filed.

  • 10
    bright-otter-152

    Just a reminder — if you have any pain at all, even stuff that feels minor right now like neck stiffness or headaches, please go get checked out. Adrenaline can mask a lot in the first 24-48 hours and symptoms sometimes show up days later. The documentation from a medical visit right after the accident is really important if things end up being more serious than they seem right now. Don't wait until you're really hurting.

    • 8
      weary-wanderer523

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

    • 6
      thankful-backseat568

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

  • 9
    tidy-sparrow-778

    Went through this exact thing last year. For me, the department actually had an online portal where you could look up the report status by incident number — worth checking your local PD's website first before you keep calling. Some smaller departments don't have that though and you really do just have to keep phoning in. I called every three days until it was ready, which ended up being about two weeks total. Annoying but that's kind of just how it goes.

    • 13
      silent-otter-870

      Honest answer from someone who used to work claims: adjusters work with incident numbers all the time in the early stages and it usually doesn't slow much down. What DOES matter is that once the report comes out, you actually read it carefully before your adjuster does. If there's an error — wrong lane diagram, wrong description of damage, anything — you want to flag it early. Adjusters are processing dozens of claims and they're not going to catch a mistake that benefits the other party. That's on you to catch.

    • 6
      careful-walker846

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