Your first goal is safety and medical care. After that, the next 24–72 hours can make or break your ability to recover.
Do these things as soon as you’re able:
- Report the crash right away to the police so there’s an official incident record.
- Write down details while they’re fresh: approximate time, direction of travel, vehicle color/make/model if known, and anything distinctive (lights, bumper shape, damage pattern).
- Capture scene information: roadway conditions, signage, lighting, and any nearby cameras you believe might have footage.
- Get witness contact info. In King City, people may be heading to work or errands—if you wait, you can lose the only person who saw what happened.
- Ask your medical provider to document the connection between the collision and your symptoms (what you felt immediately, how pain changed, and what limitations you’re experiencing).
If you’re thinking about using a “quick AI” assistant to organize what happened, that’s fine for drafting your notes. But don’t let it replace legal guidance on what to say to insurance and what evidence to prioritize.


