After a crash, the instinct is to “figure it out later.” In practice, early evidence and early medical documentation are what keep your claim from getting blurred.
Focus on these priorities:
- Get medical care promptly for any pain, head injury concerns, or even “minor” symptoms. Some injuries (like concussions, soft-tissue trauma, and back/neck issues) can worsen after the adrenaline wears off.
- Record what you can while it’s still fresh: traffic lights/signs, the lane you were in, where the impact occurred, weather/visibility, and what the driver did immediately before the crash.
- Preserve photos and videos of the roadway and positions of vehicles/bicycle. If there’s construction or debris common to commutes in the area, capture that too.
- Write down witness details (names + how to reach them). In suburban areas, witnesses are often passing drivers or neighbors who may not think they’ll matter—until they do.
- Be careful with statements to insurers. The first recorded version of events can be used later to argue fault or minimize injuries.
If you want to organize your facts efficiently, an AI bicycle accident intake assistant can help you build a clear timeline and checklist of documents to bring to a lawyer—without replacing legal advice.


