Every year, millions of people in the United States are involved in accidents that weren’t their fault. Car crashes, slip and falls in stores, rideshare incidents, workplace injuries — the list is long and the circumstances vary widely. What stays remarkably consistent is what happens next: most people make the same handful of mistakes that reduce or eliminate the compensation they’re legally entitled to collect.
The mistakes aren’t made out of carelessness. They’re made because the personal injury system is deliberately difficult for non-lawyers to navigate, insurance companies have entire teams working to minimize payouts, and nobody hands you a manual at the scene of the accident. Understanding what those mistakes are — and why people keep making them — is the most useful thing you can do before you’re ever in a position where you need to know.
This is a breakdown of the most consequential errors, the misconceptions behind them, and what actually happens when people get these decisions right.
Underestimating the injury because it doesn’t hurt right away
The human body responds to traumatic impact with an immediate flood of adrenaline. Pain signals that would otherwise be overwhelming get suppressed in the first minutes and hours after an accident. This is a survival mechanism — it’s also why so many accident victims walk away from crash scenes feeling fine and then wake up the next morning unable to turn their head.
Whiplash is the textbook example. The neck snaps forward and backward faster than the muscles can react, causing soft tissue damage that doesn’t produce symptoms until the adrenaline clears. People who decline medical attention at the scene — often because they feel okay — find themselves 48 hours later with significant symptoms and no documentation linking those symptoms to the accident. Insurance adjusters are trained to use that gap. No immediate medical record means the injury is harder to prove, and harder to prove means lower settlement offers.
The average whiplash payout in California varies significantly based on injury severity, treatment duration, and documentation quality — not just on whether the injury exists. Victims who seek medical attention the same day, follow through on recommended treatment, and keep detailed records of symptoms and limitations consistently recover more than those who wait to see if the pain goes away on its own. It often doesn’t. And by the time they seek care, weeks of untreated progression have made both the injury worse and the legal claim harder to build.
Talking to the other side’s insurance company without legal advice
Within days of a serious accident — sometimes within hours — the at-fault party’s insurance adjuster will call the victim. The call feels routine. The adjuster sounds friendly, reasonable, just doing their job. They’ll ask how you’re feeling, what happened, and whether you’d like to get things resolved quickly. This is not a conversation designed to help you.
Insurance adjusters are trained to elicit statements that can be used to minimize or deny claims. Phrases like “I’m doing okay” or “it wasn’t that bad” get recorded and later presented as admissions that injuries were minor. Accepting a quick settlement — which adjusters often push for before the full extent of injuries is known — permanently forfeits the right to additional compensation, even if the injury turns out to be far more serious than it initially appeared. A whiplash injury that requires six months of physical therapy is worth substantially more than what most quick settlements offer.
The correct response when the other side’s insurer calls is to note the name and contact information of the adjuster, say that you’ll be in touch through your attorney, and end the call. You are not legally obligated to give a recorded statement to the other party’s insurance company. Anything you say in that conversation can be used against your claim. Nothing you say in it is binding on the insurer.
Not understanding how rideshare accident liability actually works
The Uber and Lyft insurance structure most passengers don’t know about
Rideshare accidents are among the most commonly mishandled personal injury situations because the liability structure is genuinely more complex than a standard car accident. Most passengers who are injured in an Uber assume they’ll simply file a claim against the driver. What they don’t realize is that the applicable insurance policy — and the coverage limits available to them — depend entirely on the driver’s status in the app at the moment of the crash.
When a driver is logged into the app and actively carrying a passenger, Uber’s commercial insurance policy provides up to $1 million in liability coverage. When the driver is logged in but hasn’t yet accepted a ride, the coverage drops significantly. When the driver is offline entirely, only their personal insurance applies — and personal auto policies routinely exclude coverage for commercial activity. Understanding Uber’s insurance policy after accidents and exactly what coverage tier applied in a specific crash is the starting point for any rideshare injury claim. Getting it wrong means pursuing the wrong policy and potentially leaving the majority of available compensation uncollected.
Passengers also frequently don’t know that their own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage can apply in rideshare accidents, or that third-party drivers who caused the crash may be liable independently of Uber’s corporate insurance structure. Rideshare injury cases benefit enormously from attorneys who handle them regularly, because the insurance-stacking questions involved require specific experience to navigate correctly.
Assuming retail store injuries aren’t worth pursuing
Why slip and fall cases in stores are more viable than most people think
Slip and fall injuries in grocery stores, retail chains, and other commercial properties are among the most common premises liability claims in the country — and among the most frequently abandoned by the people who have them. The typical pattern: someone slips on a wet floor, a spilled product, or a poorly maintained surface, injures themselves, and then talks themselves out of pursuing a claim because they assume nobody will believe it wasn’t their fault, or that the injury isn’t serious enough, or that it’s too much trouble to fight a large retailer.
All three assumptions are frequently wrong. Retail stores have legal obligations under premises liability law to maintain reasonably safe conditions for customers. When they fail to clean up a hazard in a reasonable amount of time, fail to post warning signs about known dangers, or allow structural conditions to exist that create foreseeable risk, they can be held liable for injuries that result. The store’s size doesn’t protect it — if anything, larger retailers are held to a higher standard because they have more resources to implement safety protocols.
Documentation matters enormously in these cases. Incident reports filed at the time of the accident, photographs of the hazard before it’s cleaned up, names of witnesses, and medical records connecting the injury to the fall all strengthen the claim. Retail store negligence settlements vary based on injury severity, the strength of the negligence evidence, and how quickly the case is documented. Victims who leave the scene without filing a report, or who wait weeks to seek medical care, consistently recover less than those who document immediately. Stores have surveillance footage that can disappear within days. Evidence that exists today may not exist next month.
Waiting too long to act on any of the above
Every type of personal injury claim operates under a statute of limitations — a deadline by which legal action must be initiated or the right to compensation is permanently forfeited. In most states, that window is two years from the date of the injury. In some states and for claims against government entities, it can be significantly shorter. Two years sounds generous until you factor in how long it takes for injuries to fully manifest, medical treatment to conclude, and the actual scope of damages to become clear.
The evidence problem compounds over time. Security footage gets overwritten. Witnesses become harder to locate. Physical conditions at accident scenes change. Doctors’ recollections of treatment become less specific. Insurance companies know that delay works in their favor, which is why adjusters push for early settlements — before the victim has had time to understand the full cost of their injuries or consult with an attorney who can evaluate the actual value of the claim.
The most effective thing an accident victim can do is consult a personal injury attorney early — ideally within days of the accident, while evidence is still available and the medical situation is still being documented. Most personal injury attorneys offer free initial consultations and work on contingency, meaning no upfront cost and no fee unless there’s a recovery. The call costs nothing. Waiting often does.






