After a pedestrian accident, early actions can affect how strongly your claim is supported later.
- Get checked right away, even if injuries seem minor. In practice, symptoms like concussion effects, back pain, or soft-tissue injuries can show up later.
- Document what you can while it’s still fresh: photos of the street position, crosswalk or crossing area, traffic signals, lighting, and any visible road hazards.
- Preserve witness information (names + phone numbers). People in busy areas may be in a hurry and forget details.
- Write down your timeline while you remember it—what route you took, what you saw before impact, and how you felt immediately after.
- Be careful with statements to insurance. A quick explanation can be used against you when fault is disputed.
If you’re thinking, “Can an AI tool help me review my pedestrian accident evidence?”—it can help you structure what you have. But it can’t replace a lawyer’s job of interpreting the scene, spotting gaps, and anticipating Pennsylvania insurer tactics.


