Right after a crash, the goal is simple: get medically documented and preserve information that insurers and investigators rely on.
- Get checked—even if you feel “mostly okay.” Concussions, wrist/shoulder injuries, and soft-tissue damage can show up later. In Colorado, medical documentation is often the clearest bridge between the crash and your losses.
- Write down a timeline while it’s fresh. Include the street/intersection, direction of travel, weather, lighting, and exactly what you saw the other driver do.
- Preserve scene details. If it’s safe, take photos of roadway conditions, traffic control, any debris, lane markings, and your bicycle condition.
- Don’t “wing it” with insurer statements. Insurance adjusters may use your words to narrow liability or argue the injury is unrelated.
If you’re thinking about using an AI bicycle accident intake tool to organize your facts, that can be helpful for structuring your story—but it should support a lawyer’s review, not replace it.


