The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentskind-crane-966

Tried to handle my accident claim solo — here's what actually caught me off guard

So a few months back I got rear-ended pretty hard at a stoplight. Nothing felt life-altering at first — my neck was sore, my bumper was crushed, and I figured I'd just deal directly with the other driver's insurance and be done with it in a couple weeks. Seemed straightforward.

Spoiler: it was not straightforward.

The adjuster I got assigned was actually pretty friendly at first, which I think made me drop my guard. I started collecting repair estimates, forwarding my urgent care bill, answering all their questions. I honestly felt like we were just... working together toward the same goal? Naive, I know.

Then the settlement offer came and I almost laughed. It barely covered my car repair and one doctor visit. No mention of the two weeks I worked reduced hours. No mention of the follow-up appointments or the physical therapy my doctor was already recommending. No mention of the fact that I still couldn't turn my head fully to the left.

I didn't even know "pain and suffering" was a real line item you could negotiate until a friend mentioned it offhand. I'd been thinking about this whole thing way too narrowly — just property damage and one medical bill.

I ended up talking to a PI attorney before signing anything. Didn't even cost me anything for the consultation. Whether you hire someone or not, I'd genuinely recommend at least doing that before you put pen to paper on an early offer.

Has anyone else gone through this and tried to DIY it? Curious how it turned out for others.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 10
    mellow-hare-894

    This is basically word for word my experience from two years ago. The adjuster was super nice and I thought that meant they were being fair. It wasn't until I actually listed out every expense — gas to appointments, over-the-counter stuff, the days I had to call out — that I realized how much I was leaving on the table. That 'friendly' tone is part of the process, not a sign they're looking out for you.

    • 6
      warm-tern-854

      The early offer is almost always a lowball. That's not a conspiracy theory, that's just how the math works for them. The faster you settle, the less they pay. They're betting you don't know what your claim is actually worth yet — and honestly, most people don't, because how would you? You've never done this before.

    • 12
      clear-seal-951

      Please don't settle before you know the full picture of your injuries. Soft tissue stuff — neck, back, shoulder — can look minor early on and then become a much bigger deal over weeks or months. I've seen patients think they were fine at week two and then need months of PT. Once you sign that release, you typically can't go back for more even if things get worse.

  • 17
    sharp-otter-451

    I'll be real with you — I used to work on the insurance side and the first offer is rarely the 'real' offer. It's a starting point. Adjusters have ranges they're authorized to work within and that first number is usually near the bottom. If you counter with documentation they will move. The question is just how much they'll move and whether you know enough to push effectively.

  • 16
    gentle-kestrel-802

    A few things people almost always forget to account for: future medical costs (not just what you've paid so far), lost earning capacity if this affects your work long-term, and mileage/transportation to every single appointment. Keep receipts for literally everything. Even if you handle this yourself, documentation is what moves the needle in any negotiation.

  • 11
    hearty-badger-266

    Not legal advice, but the free consultation thing OP mentioned is real and underused. Most PI attorneys offer it with zero obligation. Even a 30-minute conversation can give you a much clearer picture of what your claim might actually include — which puts you in a way stronger position whether you hire someone or go it alone. There's no downside to getting informed before you sign a release.

    • 2
      patient-traveler200

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

    • 1
      mellow-offramp404

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 16
    bright-beaver-278

    Honestly just glad you talked to someone before signing. A lot of people don't even know they can do that for free. Hope your neck is feeling better — that kind of injury messes with your whole day in ways people don't realize until it's happening to them.

    • 4
      calm-optimist191

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

  • 6
    hearty-otter-727

    Three things: don't give a recorded statement without knowing your rights first, don't accept the first offer, and don't sign anything that says 'full and final settlement' until you're actually sure it's full. Everything else is details.

  • 15
    hearty-finch-038

    Genuine question — did you have any documented medical treatment before they made the offer, or were you mostly going off the one urgent care visit? Asking because the strength of your counter-offer usually depends a lot on what's actually in writing from a doctor. If your PT recommendation was verbal, that might be harder to factor in.

    • 9
      patient-wanderer753

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.