The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionskeen-crow-431

Not at fault, still drowning — do I actually need a lawyer or am I overthinking this?

Hey everyone. I got rear-ended at a red light about six weeks ago by someone who ran into me pretty hard. Police report is clear — 100% the other driver's fault. No dispute there.

Here's where I'm lost: I'm dealing with neck and upper back pain that's still not resolved, I've been doing physical therapy, and my car was totaled. The other driver's insurance has been okay so far — not hostile, but definitely not rushing to help me either. They keep asking for more documentation and I feel like every week that goes by is just... nothing happening.

I'm also in a tough spot personally. I'm on a pretty tight budget (grad school, part-time job, the whole thing), and I honestly can't afford to make a wrong move here. I keep reading that personal injury lawyers take around a third of whatever you recover, sometimes more if it goes to litigation. So I'm trying to figure out:

  • Is it even worth hiring someone, or will the fees eat up most of what I'd get anyway?
  • What's the difference between just letting PIP handle things vs. actually going after the at-fault driver's liability coverage?
  • If I settle early, am I leaving money on the table — especially since I don't even know yet if my back is going to be a longer-term issue?
  • What are the rookie mistakes people make at this stage that they regret later?

I've had a few free consultations but honestly they all felt like a sales pitch and I left more confused than before. I'm not sleeping well, I'm anxious constantly, and I just want to make a smart decision without getting taken advantage of. Anyone been through something like this?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 20
    gentle-raven-150

    I was in almost the exact same boat two years ago — rear-ended, clear liability, but totally paralyzed by the process. Honestly the thing I regret most is waiting so long to get a lawyer because I was worried about the fees. By the time I understood what was happening, I'd already said some things to the adjuster I probably shouldn't have. The lawyer I eventually hired got me way more than I would have gotten on my own, even after their cut. Just my experience.

    • 10
      daring-beaver-954

      I worked claims for years and I'll be honest with you — when someone is unrepresented, the early settlement offer almost always has a lot more room in it than we let on. We weren't evil about it, it's just how the math worked. An attorney on the other side changes the whole dynamic. Whether that math works out for you specifically depends on the severity of your injuries, but for anything involving ongoing treatment, I'd at least get a second or third consultation before deciding to go it alone.

  • 6
    gentle-heron-394

    That 'we just need more documentation' loop the adjuster is running on you? That's a classic delay tactic. They're hoping you get frustrated, need money, and accept a low early offer. They are NOT on your side, even if they sound friendly on the phone. Stop giving them more than they're legally entitled to until you know what your rights are.

    • 22
      gentle-vole-086

      A few practical things worth knowing: most PI lawyers do free consultations and work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing upfront and they only get paid if you recover something. The percentage varies but it's usually in the ballpark you mentioned — higher if it actually goes to trial, which most cases don't. Also, there's usually a difference between attorney fees and case costs (things like medical record requests, expert fees, etc.) — make sure you ask how those are handled before signing anything. Some firms deduct costs before calculating the fee, some after. That difference matters.

    • 4
      silent-wolf-530

      Stop talking to the other driver's insurance adjuster without knowing exactly what you're doing. Seriously. You don't have to be rude, just say you're still evaluating your options and you'll be in touch. You have time. Use it.

    • 16
      cool-swift-577

      I don't want to be harsh but I'd want to know more before saying 'definitely get a lawyer.' How serious is the injury, really? Is PT helping? Do you have any imaging showing anything structural? Because if you're basically recovered in another month and the bills are modest, the legal fees might genuinely eat into a settlement that wasn't that big to begin with. Not every case benefits equally from representation. What are the doctors actually saying about your prognosis?

    • 9
      gentle-optimist868

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 18
    careful-dove-238

    Please don't settle until your doctors have a clearer picture of where you're headed. Neck and upper back injuries from rear-end collisions can look like they're improving and then plateau or flare back up months later. Once you sign a release, that's it — you can't go back. Make sure whoever you're working with (lawyer or not) understands the full medical picture, including any imaging results or specialist opinions.

  • 20
    hearty-newt-600

    I know it feels like a mess right now but honestly the fact that liability is clear puts you in a much better position than a lot of people here. That's a huge thing. You're not fighting about who caused the accident — you're just figuring out how to get what you're owed. That's a much simpler problem even if it doesn't feel that way.

    • 6
      curious-commuter473

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 18
    swift-newt-071

    The not sleeping thing really got me. I went through something stressful (different situation) and the mental load of not knowing what to do next is genuinely exhausting. Please be kind to yourself while you figure this out. You're not stupid for being confused — this stuff is confusing on purpose.

    • 3
      calm-traveler472

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 11
    warm-kestrel-735

    Not legal advice, just general thoughts: the contingency fee concern is real but it's also a bit of a false economy if you're comparing 'lawyer gets a third of X' vs 'I settle for a fraction of X on my own.' The better question is whether representation is likely to increase the total recovery enough to matter after fees. For cases with ongoing treatment and unresolved injuries, that answer is often yes — but it depends on specifics I obviously don't know. The free consult process is frustrating but keep going until you find someone who actually explains your options rather than just pitching you.

    • 2
      honest-parent351

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