What you do immediately after the impact can affect what insurers accept later.
1) Get checked—even if you feel “mostly okay.” Florida injuries can be deceptive. Concussion symptoms, soft-tissue damage, and back/neck problems may show up later. A prompt medical visit helps connect your symptoms to the accident.
2) Write down what you remember before it fades. Include: time of day, weather/lighting, what you were doing (tourist crossing, walking to a store, leaving a parking lot), and whether you saw a turn signal or brake lights.
3) Photograph the scene while you still can. In Marathon, impacts often happen near:
- busier corridors with heavier turning traffic
- hotel/restaurant areas where pedestrians move between parking and entrances
- construction zones where lane patterns shift
Photos that matter: vehicle position, crosswalk markings, traffic signs, any debris, and the visible distance to where you were struck.
4) Don’t give a recorded statement without understanding the risk. Insurers may ask questions that sound harmless but can be used to argue your injuries were less severe or your story changed.


