The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Medical & injuriescool-mole-202

Rear-ended, soft tissue injury, insurance already calling — do I even need a lawyer?

So this happened about three weeks ago. I was sitting at a red light and got hit from behind pretty hard. Other driver admitted fault at the scene, police report backs me up, so liability isn't the issue.

I've been dealing with stiffness and aching across my upper back and shoulders ever since. Not debilitating, but it's affecting my sleep and I can't sit at my desk for more than an hour without needing to get up. Started seeing a physical therapist my doctor referred me to — she's talking about 8–12 weeks of treatment minimum.

Here's where it gets confusing. The at-fault driver's insurance has already been super friendly and responsive. They sent me a recorded-statement request (I declined for now), and the adjuster casually mentioned they could "get something started" for my pain and suffering even before treatment wraps up. That felt off to me?

Meanwhile my PT clinic mentioned they have a "patient advocate" on staff who works with attorneys. I didn't sign anything, but they definitely floated the idea.

I've been reading that soft tissue cases without an attorney often settle fast but low. But I'm also nervous about giving up a third of whatever I recover, especially if my injuries stay mild.

Questions I keep circling back to:

  • Is it dumb to try and handle this myself?
  • When does it actually make sense to get a lawyer involved?
  • Should I even be talking to the adjuster at all right now?

Any experience with this would really help. I feel like everyone I talk to in real life has a strong opinion but zero actual knowledge.

13replies

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

13 replies

  • 20
    silent-otter-716

    I was in almost the exact same situation two years ago — rear-ended, soft tissue, insurance acting super friendly right out of the gate. I tried to handle it myself and honestly I think I left real money on the table. The adjuster was pleasant right up until they sent a lowball final offer and said take it or leave it. By then I'd already given a recorded statement and signed some things I didn't fully understand. I'm not saying you need a lawyer, but I wish I'd at least consulted one before talking to the adjuster at all.

  • 21
    gentle-sparrow-046

    That adjuster being "super friendly" is a tactic, full stop. They are not your friend. Their job is to close your file for as little as possible. The fact that they're already dangling a number before you've even finished treatment is a huge red flag — they want you to settle before you know the full extent of your injuries. Please don't give a recorded statement. That thing can and will be used to minimize your claim later.

    • 8
      cool-crane-130

      Don't talk to the adjuster again until you've at least done one free consult with a PI attorney. That's it. One conversation costs you nothing and you'll walk out knowing a lot more than you do right now. The adjuster will still be there next week.

    • 2
      patient-traveler592

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

  • 12
    clever-beaver-847

    I worked claims for several years and I'll be honest with you: when an adjuster reaches out early and sounds eager, it usually means they think the claim has more value than what they're about to offer. Early settlements are almost always in the company's favor, not yours. You genuinely don't know yet if your soft tissue issues will resolve cleanly or turn into something longer. Settling before MMI (maximum medical improvement) is almost always a mistake.

    • 7
      gentle-parent316

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 19
    candid-crane-967

    A few practical things worth knowing: (1) most PI attorneys offer free consultations, so there's no harm in talking to one before you decide anything. (2) You are under no obligation to give the other driver's insurer a recorded statement — that's for their benefit, not yours. (3) "Soft tissue" cases can actually vary wildly in value depending on treatment duration, documentation, and how well your symptoms are captured in medical records. Getting at least one attorney consult before you talk to the adjuster again seems like the smart move.

  • 10
    gentle-crane-767

    The sleep disruption and inability to sit for long stretches is worth taking seriously and documenting carefully. People underestimate how much soft tissue injuries can linger or flare back up, especially if you push through them at work. Make sure your PT is noting your functional limitations at every single visit — that paper trail matters a lot if your recovery takes longer than expected.

  • 12
    clear-swan-698

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: the question of whether to hire an attorney isn't just about injury severity — it's about whether you have the time, knowledge, and stomach to negotiate against professionals who do this every single day. Most people don't. A free consult costs you nothing and at minimum gives you a clearer picture of what your claim might actually be worth. The contingency fee structure exists partly because it aligns the attorney's incentives with yours — they don't get paid unless you do.

    • 0
      careful-traveler837

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 9
    keen-beaver-087

    How far along are you in treatment? Because "8–12 weeks" is an estimate, not a guarantee. If your symptoms resolve in four weeks, this is a very different conversation than if you're still in PT three months from now. I'd hold off on any big decisions — attorney or no attorney — until you have a clearer picture of where your recovery is actually headed.

    • 8
      gentle-neighbor425

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 13
    steady-wren-184

    The fact that you're asking these questions before signing anything or giving a recorded statement puts you way ahead of most people in this situation. A lot of folks just go along with whatever the adjuster says because they don't realize they have options. You've got time — use it to get informed.