Your early actions can affect how your claim is evaluated. Before you speak at length to insurers, focus on these practical steps:
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Get medical care and document symptoms
- Even if you think the injury is minor, a medical record creates an objective timeline.
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Preserve crash details before they disappear
- Take photos of the roadway, intersections, traffic control, lighting conditions, and any debris.
- If you can do so safely, capture the positions of vehicles and your bicycle.
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Write down what you remember while it’s still clear
- Note signals, turns, lane position, speed estimates (if you can), and any near-misses.
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Avoid giving a recorded statement before you understand the claim
- Insurers may ask questions that sound harmless but can be used to shift blame.
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Keep receipts and proof of impact
- Track medication costs, co-pays, transportation to appointments, and any time you missed from work.
If you’ve heard about an “AI bicycle accident lawyer” or an “AI legal assistant for bicycle accidents,” treat it as a way to organize your notes—not as a substitute for legal evaluation. In Fontana, where adjusters move quickly, having a clean, consistent record is what helps your attorney act efficiently.


