In the first hours after impact, your choices can strongly affect what insurers later say about fault and injury.
- Get checked, even if you feel “mostly okay.” Concussions, soft-tissue injuries, and fractures can show up or worsen later.
- Document while details are fresh. Capture photos of the roadway, lane position, signage, crosswalks, and anything that may have contributed (debris, drainage issues, construction staging).
- Write down your ride details from memory. Time of day, direction of travel, what traffic signals showed, and how the collision happened.
- Avoid over-explaining to insurance right away. You can share basic facts, but don’t guess. Let a lawyer review your wording before you provide a recorded statement.
If you’re wondering whether an “AI intake” tool can help you organize your recollection—yes, it can help you build a timeline. But it should be used to prepare for legal review, not to replace it.


