Before you worry about fault or paperwork, focus on steps that protect both your health and your claim:
- Get medical care promptly (urgent care or ER if needed). Texas insurers commonly look for consistency between your symptoms and the timing of treatment.
- Document the scene if it’s safe: traffic signals, lane markings, curb cuts, debris, and whether a driver was actively turning.
- Write down witness information while memories are fresh—names, phone numbers, and what they saw.
- Save everything: photos of your bike damage, torn clothing/helmet, and any repair estimates.
- Be careful with recorded statements. Early comments to an insurer can be used to argue you were not hurt as claimed or that the crash was avoidable.
If you’re thinking about using an AI bicycle accident assistant to organize what you remember, that can help—but it should support your next step (a lawyer’s review), not replace it.


