The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
Car accidentscareful-tern-334

Rear-ended two days ago and my neck/shoulders are WAY worse today — is that normal?

So I got hit from behind on Wednesday while I was stopped at a red light. The guy who hit me admitted it was his fault on the spot, told the responding officer the same thing, and his insurance has already been in contact with me. All of that part has been pretty straightforward.

Here's the thing though — right after the crash I felt okay. Little shaken up, mild headache, nothing I couldn't push through. I figured I got lucky. But I woke up yesterday and my neck was stiff, and this morning it's even worse. Now I've got this dull throbbing that goes from the base of my skull down into both shoulders and I can barely turn my head to the left. It genuinely feels like someone replaced my spine with a metal rod overnight.

Is it normal for symptoms to get worse on day two and three rather than right away? I feel like I should've been getting better by now, not worse.

Also — the other driver's insurance already called me and floated a quick settlement. It was low enough that it wouldn't even cover a few urgent care visits, let alone anything more serious. Something about that feels really off to me. Like why are they moving so fast?

I have a regular doctor but the earliest I can get in is next week. Should I just go to urgent care today to get checked out and document everything, or wait it out over the weekend? I don't want to overreact but I also don't want to make things worse by ignoring it.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 20
    cool-vole-968

    Please go to urgent care today — don't wait until next week. What you're describing is super common with whiplash. The adrenaline from the crash masks a lot of the pain initially, and inflammation builds over 48-72 hours, which is why day two and three often feel way worse than day one. Getting evaluated now does two things: it makes sure nothing more serious is going on (herniated discs can present this way too), and it creates a medical record that documents your symptoms while they're fresh. That documentation matters a lot later.

  • 8
    calm-marmot-574

    Yes, completely normal for it to feel worse before it gets better. I was rear-ended a couple years ago and thought I was fine the first night. By day three I could barely get out of bed. Turned out I had some soft tissue damage that took months of PT to work through. Go get seen today — you need it on record that you sought treatment right away.

    • 7
      curious-traveler602

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

  • 19
    steady-raven-679

    That quick settlement offer is a HUGE red flag. Insurers don't move fast because they're being nice — they move fast because they want you to sign away your rights before you know how injured you actually are. Once you accept and sign a release, that's it. You can't go back even if you need surgery six weeks from now. Do not accept anything, do not cash any check, and honestly don't even have more substantive conversations with them until you know the full picture of your injuries.

    • 8
      kind-rider394

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

  • 21
    bright-newt-793

    I used to work on the insurance side and I'll be real with you: reaching out with a settlement offer this fast is a pretty standard tactic. The goal is to close the claim cheaply before the claimant gets medical records showing the full extent of their injuries. They're betting you don't know what your claim is actually worth yet. And honestly, most people don't at this stage — because the injuries aren't fully developed. You're not even through the worst of the symptoms yet based on what you're describing.

    • 0
      weathered-co-pilot772

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

    • 2
      quiet-driver619

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

  • 8
    daring-marten-122

    A few practical things: First, go to urgent care today and tell them exactly how the injury happened — they need to document the mechanism of injury, not just your symptoms. Second, keep a notes app log every single day describing your pain levels, what you can and can't do, how your sleep is affected, etc. That kind of personal injury journal is genuinely useful later. Third, don't give the other insurance a recorded statement without understanding what you're agreeing to. You're generally not required to give one to the other party's insurer.

  • 21
    silent-fox-060

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: symptoms that worsen over the first few days after a rear-end collision are really common and can indicate injuries that take time to fully manifest. Settling before you've completed medical treatment — or even been properly diagnosed — is almost always premature. Most personal injury attorneys offer free consultations and can at least give you a sense of whether the offer you received is in the right ballpark. Worth a call before you make any decisions.

    • 8
      tired-driver653

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

  • 19
    mellow-mole-594

    Please just go get checked out today. I know it feels like maybe you're making a big deal out of nothing, but you're describing real pain that's getting worse — that's your body telling you something. And you don't want to be in a position weeks from now where you're hurting and realize you didn't get things documented when you should have. Take care of yourself first, figure out the insurance stuff after.

    • 6
      careful-rider782

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

  • 14
    daring-lynx-047

    Urgent care today, no debate. Don't accept that settlement. And stop talking to their insurance without figuring out what you're dealing with medically first. Those three things, in that order.