The Shoulder
The Shoulder
46
Car accidentswarm-marmot-128

Pain showed up 4 days after the crash — is that normal or am I overthinking?

So I was rear-ended at a stoplight last week. When it happened I genuinely felt okay — a little rattled, heart pounding, but I walked around, talked to the other driver, waited for the police report, and drove myself home. I thought I'd gotten lucky.

Fast forward four days and I wake up and my shoulders are stiff as a board and I've got this dull ache radiating up the back of my neck that wasn't there before. By day five it was bad enough that I made a doctor's appointment.

Here's what's freaking me out: the other driver's insurance already called me twice. The second time they were pretty friendly about it but mentioned something about "wrapping things up quickly" and wanting to know how I was feeling. I didn't say much, just that I was still evaluating. But now I'm reading all this stuff online and I'm scared I almost said something that would have hurt me.

Questions I have:

  • Is delayed pain actually a recognized medical thing, or does it look suspicious to insurance?
  • If I hadn't reported these new symptoms yet, is it too late to include them?
  • How early is too early to accept any kind of offer?

I'm not trying to exaggerate anything. I just don't want to sign something and then find out in three weeks that I actually hurt a muscle or disc and I've already closed my claim. Has anyone dealt with this?

Also — do I have to keep talking to their adjuster directly, or can I just... not?

10replies

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10 replies

  • 10
    steady-lynx-166

    This is almost exactly what happened to me two years ago. I felt fine at the scene, told the officer I wasn't injured, and then spent the next week barely able to turn my head. The delayed onset is real — it's not in your head. Adrenaline is wild, and soft tissue stuff doesn't always scream at you right away. Definitely don't rush into accepting anything while you're still figuring out what's going on with your body.

    • 8
      kind-grouse-010

      Honestly just reading this made me anxious for you. Please don't let them pressure you into anything. Your health has to come first. Take care of yourself and figure out what's actually going on before you make any decisions.

    • 2
      calm-wanderer773

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 20
    calm-grouse-602

    Delayed onset of pain after trauma is completely legitimate from a medical standpoint. When your body is flooded with adrenaline and cortisol during and after a collision, it can genuinely mask pain signals for hours or even days. Soft tissue injuries like muscle strains and ligament sprains are notorious for this — they often don't fully declare themselves until the inflammation sets in.

    Please go to that doctor's appointment and be thorough about describing the timeline. Tell them when the pain started, not just that it hurts now. That documentation matters.

  • 15
    gentle-marmot-508

    "Wrapping things up quickly" is a flag. Full stop. That's not them being nice — that's them trying to close your claim before you know the full picture. You are under zero obligation to give them a recorded statement or accept anything right now. Be very careful.

    • 10
      calm-beaver-821

      To answer your direct questions: yes, delayed pain is medically recognized and generally accepted in personal injury claims — it shouldn't look suspicious if it's documented properly by a doctor. No, it's typically not too late to include new symptoms as long as you haven't signed a release yet. And on your last question — you generally do not have to speak with the other party's adjuster directly, especially if you're represented. Even if you're not, you can tell them you're not ready to discuss settlement and leave it there. Get that medical documentation going now, because it creates a timeline.

  • 15
    cool-badger-354

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be straight with you: when we called early and mentioned settling fast, it was a strategy. The sooner a claimant signs a release, the less the company is exposed. That doesn't mean every adjuster is malicious, but the system is designed to close files quickly. Delayed injuries are well-documented and adjusters know it — they just hope you don't. You're asking all the right questions.

  • 16
    warm-fox-555

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this generally: the biggest mistake people make is accepting a settlement offer before they've reached what's called "maximum medical improvement" — basically, before doctors have a clear sense of the full extent of your injuries. Once you sign a release, that's usually it. The fact that you're asking these questions now, before signing anything, puts you in a much better position than most people. Document everything.

    • 5
      quiet-wanderer507

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

  • 19
    curious-swan-617

    Stop taking the adjuster's calls alone. You don't have to be rude about it — just say you're still receiving medical treatment and you'll be in touch when you have more information. Then go to your appointment, get everything documented, and don't sign a single piece of paper until you fully understand what you're signing away.