Right after a bicycle accident, your best next steps are practical and evidence-focused:
- Get medical care and document symptoms. Even if injuries feel minor at first, Illinois insurers may later argue that the crash didn’t cause what you claim. Medical records create the link.
- Take photos before you move anything. Capture the roadway, crosswalks, signals, curb ramps, lane markings, debris, and your bike and helmet condition.
- Write down what you remember—while it’s fresh. Note the direction you were traveling, what the driver did right before impact, whether there were vehicles blocking the view, and what traffic controls were present.
- Preserve witness information. If someone saw the crash near a stoplight or driveway, their statement can be critical later.
- Be careful with recorded statements. After a crash, adjusters may ask questions that sound simple but can be used to shift blame.
If you’re wondering whether an AI tool could help you prepare, it can—but only to organize your facts, not to replace legal review or medical causation analysis.


