Even when you feel shaken but “mostly okay,” pedestrian injuries can worsen over days. What you do early often determines how strongly your claim is supported later.
- Get checked by a medical provider promptly. Delayed treatment can allow insurers to question whether your symptoms were caused by the crash.
- Record details while they’re fresh. Where were you standing? Which direction were you walking? Was there a signal, a turn lane, or construction nearby?
- Preserve evidence from the scene. If safe, take photos of lighting, crosswalk markings, vehicle damage, and anything that affected visibility.
- Be careful with statements. Insurance may ask for a recorded account quickly. In Tennessee, those statements can become part of how your claim is evaluated.
- Identify witnesses. In Dickson, crashes often happen near busy stops and high-traffic corridors—witnesses may be motorists, ride-share drivers, or pedestrians who saw the approach.
If you’re looking for a “fast answer” because you’re overwhelmed, that’s normal. But a careful first response is what keeps the claim from turning into a guessing game.


