The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
Car accidentspatient-elk-825

Rear-ended two weeks ago and still have no idea what I'm supposed to be doing

Okay so I'm kind of embarrassed to admit how lost I am right now. Got hit from behind at a red light about two weeks ago — other driver was clearly at fault, admitted it on scene, police report backs it up. Seemed minor at first, I drove myself home and thought I was fine.

Then like four or five days later my neck started stiffening up bad, and now I'm getting headaches almost every morning. Went to urgent care and they said it's consistent with whiplash but told me to follow up with my regular doctor. Did that, got referred to a physical therapist.

Here's where I'm spinning out: the other driver's insurance has already called me twice. They were really friendly and casual about it, almost like we were just chatting. One of them kind of hinted that if I wanted to "wrap things up quickly" they could probably get me something soon. I didn't agree to anything but I also didn't really push back.

I don't have a lawyer. I don't even know if I need one. I'm not trying to sue anyone or get rich — I just don't want to end up paying for physical therapy out of pocket while the person who hit me faces zero consequences.

Do people usually handle this stuff on their own? Should I even be talking to that adjuster? I have no idea what a "reasonable" timeline looks like for something like this. Any advice from people who've actually been through it would genuinely help.

10replies

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

10 replies

  • 20
    gentle-crow-877

    Please stop taking those calls until you know more. That "friendly chat" and the offer to wrap things up quickly? That's a tactic. They want you to settle before you know the full extent of your injuries. Once you sign anything, you're done — you can't go back for more money even if your symptoms get worse.

  • 6
    daring-owl-342

    I went through almost this exact thing last year. Felt fine, then BAM — couldn't turn my head a week later. I made the mistake of settling fast because the adjuster made it sound so simple and reasonable. Ended up covering two months of PT out of my own pocket. Don't be me. At least talk to someone who knows this stuff before you agree to a single thing.

  • 20
    curious-tern-293

    I used to work on the insurance side of things and I'll be straight with you — that early "quick settlement" offer almost always comes in well below what someone's claim is actually worth. It's not malicious exactly, it's just the job. Adjusters are measured on closing files fast and cheap. The friendliness is real but the offer isn't necessarily fair. You don't have to be hostile, but you do need to slow this down until you know what your treatment is actually going to cost.

    • 2
      kind-neighbor588

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 17
    clear-lynx-165

    From a medical standpoint, two weeks is really early to know where you'll land with whiplash. Some people are mostly fine in a month, others end up needing care for much longer. Don't let anyone pressure you into finalizing anything while you're still in active treatment — your PT alone could run longer than you expect, and if there's any imaging needed down the line, that adds up fast.

    • 22
      daring-owl-646

      Not legal advice, but the delayed symptom pattern you're describing is extremely common in rear-impact collisions and it's exactly why personal injury claims have settlement timelines — so you actually know what you're dealing with medically before closing anything. The fact that liability seems clear is good, but the value of a claim also depends on your treatment duration and costs. Worth at least a free consult before you respond further to that adjuster.

    • 3
      kind-driver516

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

  • 12
    calm-raven-554

    A few things worth knowing: you generally don't have to speak with the other driver's insurance at all right now — you can let calls go to voicemail while you figure out your next step. If you do talk to them, you're not required to give a recorded statement. Most PI attorneys offer free consultations and it doesn't lock you into anything. Even just one conversation can help you understand what you're actually looking at here.

    • 8
      steady-swan-843

      You don't sound lost to me — you sound like someone who just got dropped into a situation nobody prepares you for. Please don't rush this just because you want it to be over. Your health comes first and you deserve to not be stuck with bills from an accident that wasn't your fault.

  • 8
    wise-crane-226

    Short version: stop talking to their insurance, document every symptom and every appointment, and get a free consult with a PI lawyer before you do anything else. You don't have to hire anyone. Just get informed. You're two weeks out and still treating — this is not the time to settle.