The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionsclear-finch-417

Wasn't sure I even needed a lawyer after my fender bender — turns out I did

So at first I genuinely thought my accident was going to be this quick, painless process. Minor collision, other driver admitted fault on the scene, I thought I'd just file a claim and move on with my life. I wasn't even going to mention a lawyer to anyone — felt like I was being dramatic.

Then my neck started bothering me about a week later. Nothing screaming "emergency," but persistent. And suddenly the insurance adjuster — who had been super friendly — started asking me weird leading questions about whether I'd had "any prior neck issues." Something about the vibe just shifted.

I ended up doing a free consult with an attorney just to see what's what. Honestly I went in expecting them to tell me I was overthinking it. Instead they walked me through a few things I genuinely didn't know — like how settling too fast can waive your right to future medical claims if something gets worse. Nobody told me that. Not the adjuster, not anyone.

I'm not saying everyone needs a lawyer every single time. If it's a truly clean, minor situation with zero injuries and a cooperative insurer, maybe you're fine going it alone. But if anything feels off — delayed symptoms, adjuster getting cagey, the other party's story shifting — just go talk to someone first before you sign anything.

The consult didn't cost me anything and it completely changed how I handled the next few weeks. Wish I'd done it on day one instead of waiting until I felt like things were already going sideways.

Anyone else wait too long before getting advice?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 12
    careful-bison-201

    Ugh yes, I did the exact same thing. Thought I was being over the top by even considering a lawyer for what looked like a minor rear-end situation. Then my back started flaring up around day ten and I realized I'd almost signed a release the week before. So glad I hadn't. Delayed symptoms are way more common than people think.

    • 12
      careful-vole-078

      Simple rule I follow: if an insurance company is asking you questions, they're not doing it to help you. Get a consult before you say much more. It's free, it's fast, and the downside risk of skipping it is way higher than the downside of making one phone call.

  • 12
    clever-wolf-936

    That shift in tone from the adjuster is a massive red flag. The moment they start poking around your medical history is the moment they're building a case to lowball or deny you. They are not your friend — their job is to protect the company's money, full stop. Please don't talk to them again without knowing exactly what you're entitled to first.

    • 16
      quiet-fox-626

      Just a heads up on process: most states have a statute of limitations on personal injury claims that's longer than people expect, but it's not unlimited. If you're considering any kind of claim, don't just assume you have forever to decide. Also keep every piece of paper related to this — repair estimates, medical visit summaries, any written communication with the insurer. Even texts. All of it matters more than people realize early on.

  • 17
    candid-dove-159

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest — when an adjuster starts asking about prior conditions early in the process, that's not casual small talk. That information goes straight into notes that could be used to argue your injury was pre-existing. I'm not saying every adjuster is acting in bad faith, but you should understand what those questions are for before you answer them freely.

  • 16
    bright-hare-764

    The delayed neck and back symptoms thing is so real and so often dismissed. Adrenaline masks a lot right after impact, and soft tissue injuries especially can take days to really show up. By the time people feel it, they've sometimes already told the adjuster they feel "fine." Always get checked out medically even if you feel okay in the moment — and make sure it's documented.

  • 9
    wise-wolf-812

    Not legal advice, but what you described — settling before the full extent of injuries is known — is one of the most common ways people inadvertently give up significant rights. A signed release is usually final. Free consultations exist exactly for situations like yours, and most PI attorneys work on contingency anyway so upfront cost isn't usually the barrier people assume it is.

    • 3
      curious-neighbor443

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

  • 14
    sharp-fox-013

    I really hope your neck is okay. Please don't let the legal stuff distract from actually taking care of yourself physically. See a doctor if you haven't already — even if it feels minor right now. You deserve to actually heal, not just get through the paperwork.

  • 15
    quick-seal-604

    Genuine question — did you get any medical documentation started yet? Because "neck bothering me" is pretty vague and without records tying it to the accident, it gets harder to connect the dots later. Not doubting you at all, just wondering where things stand paperwork-wise.

  • 17
    wise-crow-652

    The fact that you caught this before signing anything is honestly the best possible outcome at this stage. A lot of people post here after they've already settled and realized they left a lot on the table. You still have options — that's huge.