The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Rideshareclever-raven-395

Passenger in a rideshare wreck, herniated disc found — is the policy limit actually the ceiling?

So I'm still kind of processing all of this. I was a passenger in a rideshare a few months back when the driver ran a red light and got T-boned. Not my fault at all — I was just sitting there scrolling my phone and suddenly my whole world flipped sideways.

After a lot of imaging and specialist visits I found out I have a herniated disc in my lower lumbar region. I did a round of steroid injections and honestly they helped more than I expected — the sharp radiating pain calmed way down. BUT I still get this weird tingling and numbness that crawls down into my legs, especially after I sit for a while. My doctor is already hinting that if the nerve symptoms don't improve, surgery might eventually be on the table.

My attorney says the rideshare company's uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage has a policy cap, and that's basically the most we're going to be able to pull from this. I trust my attorney but I'm also a little nervous because:

  • My medical bills are already pretty significant and climbing
  • I still haven't finished treatment
  • Nobody can tell me yet whether I'll need a discectomy or fusion down the road
  • After fees, liens, and a small advance I took early on, my take-home could feel pretty thin

I guess my questions for the group are: 1. Is a policy limit really a hard wall, or are there other avenues people have found? 2. How do you even factor in future medical costs when you're settling now? 3. Did anyone else settle while still symptomatic and later regret it — or was it fine?

I'm not trying to be greedy, I genuinely just don't want to be stuck with a surgery bill years from now with zero recourse. Any experiences appreciated.

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15 replies

  • 12
    wise-marmot-122

    Not legal advice, but a couple things worth raising with your attorney: (1) stacking — depending on your state, your own personal auto policy's UM/UIM coverage might apply even as a passenger in someone else's vehicle, and (2) if the at-fault driver had any personal assets or separate coverage, there may be a direct claim path. Policy limits on one policy aren't always the absolute ceiling of a whole case. Ask specifically: 'Have we identified every available insurance source?' Good attorneys run that analysis early, but it's always fair to ask.

    • 3
      patient-traveler152

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

    • 8
      soft-spoken-offramp244

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 18
    kind-hare-596

    Please, please do not settle while you're still having nerve symptoms. Once you sign that release, it's over. The insurance company knows exactly what they're doing when they push to close out cases before you've hit maximum medical improvement. That tingling and numbness you're describing is your body telling you something isn't resolved yet.

    • 9
      mellow-otter-267

      I worked claims for years. Here's the honest truth: when a file hits policy limits, our job basically became 'get the release signed as cleanly and quickly as possible.' There's no incentive on our end to flag other coverage or slow-walk to help the claimant. That's your attorney's job. If you feel like things are moving faster than your recovery, it's completely okay to tell your attorney you're not ready to settle yet.

    • 9
      quiet-rider896

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 16
    steady-wren-489

    The leg tingling/numbness after a lumbar disc injury is something to take really seriously. That's nerve involvement and it doesn't always resolve on its own. Before anyone even thinks about final settlement, you want a clear picture from a spine specialist — not just your general treatment provider — about your actual surgical risk. A lot of people get a second opinion at this stage and it changes the whole trajectory of their case. Don't skip that step.

    • 5
      quiet-finch-015

      This is so stressful and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. You were just a passenger. You didn't ask for any of this. Please don't let anyone rush you into signing anything until YOU feel ready and your doctors have a clear answer about what your spine needs. You deserve that much.

  • 14
    brave-sparrow-788

    On the future medical costs question — your attorney can potentially hire a life care planner or medical expert to project the cost of likely future treatment, including a possible surgery. That projection becomes part of the damages argument even if you haven't had the surgery yet. It's more common in serious cases and yes it adds time, but it can make a real difference in how the demand is framed. Ask if that's been considered.

  • 5
    steady-swan-605

    Three things: get a second medical opinion on your spine before you settle, ask your attorney directly if every insurance source has been identified, and don't take another advance if you can avoid it — the interest eats your net recovery. That's really it.

  • 19
    cool-dove-355

    Quick question — did you have your own auto insurance policy at the time of the accident, even if you weren't driving? Because in some states your own UM coverage can step in as a passenger in someone else's car. A lot of people don't realize that and their own attorney doesn't always bring it up proactively. Worth a direct conversation.

    • 5
      level-offramp176

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 16
    wise-wren-273

    I was in almost the exact situation — passenger, not at fault, disc injury, policy limits. The thing that saved me was my attorney pushing to look at whether the at-fault driver had their own separate personal auto policy on top of the rideshare coverage. Turned out there was a little more to work with there. Definitely worth asking your attorney if every possible coverage layer has been checked.

    • 5
      keen-marten-206

      I know it feels overwhelming right now but the fact that the injections worked is genuinely a good sign — it means your body is responding to treatment. A lot of people with your type of injury do avoid surgery with the right follow-up care. Focus on getting fully evaluated before any decisions get made. You're asking the right questions at the right time.

    • 9
      weary-optimist136

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