Your first hours can affect everything that comes later. If you’re able, take these steps:
- Get medical care right away (urgent care, ER, or follow-up specialists). Even if symptoms seem minor, delayed reporting can become an issue.
- Request accident documentation: if police respond, obtain the report number. If not, write down what you can while it’s fresh.
- Capture the scene if it’s safe: crosswalk position, traffic signals, lighting conditions, vehicle location, and anything unusual like debris or lane markings.
- Track witnesses: names and phone numbers. People often leave quickly around busy shopping and commuting areas.
- Avoid recorded statements to insurance before you understand how your words may be used.
If you’re searching for “AI help” after an accident, those tools can sometimes help you organize what to remember. But a lawyer’s job is to translate your facts into a liability-and-damages strategy that can stand up when an insurer pushes back.


