The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswarm-elk-604

Tried handling my crash claim solo for 2 months — here's what I wish I'd done differently

So I got rear-ended at a red light back in the spring. Seemed straightforward — other driver was clearly at fault, police report backed me up, I had photos of everything. I figured, how hard could this be? I'll just file the claim, get my car fixed, and move on.

Spoiler: it was not that simple.

The adjuster was friendly at first, super responsive. But once my doctor flagged some soft tissue stuff in my neck that needed follow-up care, things got weird fast. Suddenly my calls weren't being returned as quickly. I got this lowball offer that didn't even cover half my physical therapy. I tried to push back on my own and honestly had no idea what I was doing.

A friend finally convinced me to at least talk to an attorney. I kept putting it off because I assumed lawyers were for like, serious injury cases — broken bones, surgery, that kind of thing. My situation felt too "small."

Turning point: the consultation was free, took maybe 30 minutes, and the attorney immediately spotted two things I'd completely missed — a gap in how I'd documented my missed work days, and a deadline I was dangerously close to for filing something. I hadn't even known that deadline existed.

I'm still in the middle of everything, so I can't tell you how it ends. But I genuinely wish I'd made that call on day one instead of week nine.

Anyone else wait too long before getting help? Or did you go straight to an attorney and feel like it was worth it (or not)? Trying to get a sense of what's "normal" here.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    silent-crow-002

    I used to work on the insurance side and I'll be straight with you — when a claimant is unrepresented, adjusters know they have a lot more flexibility on what they offer. It's not always malicious, but the incentive structure rewards settling low. The moment an attorney's name shows up on a file, the whole tone of how that claim gets handled internally tends to shift. That's just the reality of it.

  • 19
    warm-marten-338

    That "friendly adjuster" phase is what gets people every time. They're building rapport so you'll trust them, share information you don't need to share, and accept an offer before you even know the full extent of your injuries. Soft tissue stuff especially — symptoms can worsen or show up weeks later and by then you've already signed something. Please be careful.

    • 21
      tidy-crow-547

      The deadline thing you mentioned is huge and I'm glad someone caught it. Every state has a statute of limitations for personal injury claims and missing it can completely bar you from recovering anything, no matter how clear-cut the liability is. A lot of people don't realize that clock is ticking from day one. Even if you decide not to hire anyone, at least get a free consult early so you know what deadlines apply to your situation.

    • 14
      silent-owl-258

      Not legal advice, but what you described — a documented injury, a lowball offer, and a missed deadline nearly slipping by — is pretty much the textbook case for why early consultation matters. Most PI attorneys work on contingency for exactly this reason, so cost shouldn't be the barrier. The consult is usually free and at minimum you walk away knowing where you stand. Good luck with the rest of your claim.

    • 2
      plainspoken-backseat228

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 16
    kind-bison-695

    The soft tissue piece is worth taking seriously. People often underestimate neck and back injuries from rear-end collisions because you might feel okay-ish in the first few days — adrenaline masks a lot. Then a few weeks later things flare up and if you've already settled, you're stuck covering ongoing treatment yourself. Make sure you're following through on all your medical appointments and keeping records of everything, even stuff that seems minor.

    • 3
      honest-rider673

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

  • 14
    sharp-raven-670

    Genuine question — did the attorney actually explain why that deadline was relevant to your specific situation, or just mention it in passing? I ask because sometimes consults are used to scare you into signing quickly. Not saying that's what happened, just worth understanding the specifics before you commit to anything.

    • 10
      clear-hare-071

      Rule of thumb I tell everyone: if there's any injury at all, even stuff that might need more treatment, call an attorney before you talk to the other driver's insurance again. You can always decide not to hire one after the consult. But you can't un-say things you already told an adjuster.

  • 10
    steady-sparrow-026

    Hey, week nine is still way better than never. You caught it before anything was signed or forfeited, you've got someone in your corner now, and you're documenting everything going forward. Lots of people on here didn't get that chance. You're actually in a decent position compared to where you could be.

  • 9
    warm-wren-985

    Ugh, this is almost exactly what happened to me. I kept thinking "I can handle this, it's not that complicated" and then four months in I was drowning in EOBs and denial letters and I didn't even know what half the words meant. The adjuster was SO nice at first too. That niceness is a strategy, I'm pretty sure.

    • 3
      hopeful-walker599

      How long did it end up taking in your case?