Your best chance at a stronger claim often depends on what happens immediately after the collision.
- Get medical care—even if you feel “okay.” Some injuries (concussions, ligament injuries, internal pain) don’t fully show up right away. In Michigan, insurers often scrutinize whether treatment was prompt and consistent with the crash.
- Take Burton-area scene photos while you can: intersections, turning lanes, traffic controls, lane markings, debris, lighting conditions, and your bicycle’s position. If weather is a factor, note it (rain, glare, potholes, salt residue).
- Write down a timeline from memory the same day: time of day, what you saw, vehicle description, what the driver did right before impact, and any near-misses.
- Do not give a recorded or overly detailed statement to an insurer before your injuries are documented.
If you’re wondering whether to use an AI bicycle accident assistant to help organize what to remember, think of it as a memory organizer, not a substitute for legal advice. It can help you structure your facts, but Michigan liability still turns on evidence and professional analysis.


