The steps you take right away can affect whether your claim holds up later—especially if the insurance company later questions what happened.
- Get medical attention promptly (even if injuries seem minor at first). Some pedestrian injuries—like concussions, soft-tissue damage, or back/neck strains—may worsen after the adrenaline wears off.
- Request the police report and keep a copy of any incident details.
- Document the scene while it’s fresh: traffic signals, lighting conditions, where you were walking, vehicle position, and any visible marks on the roadway.
- Write down witness information while you still remember faces and statements.
- Avoid recorded statements or “quick answers” to adjusters until you’ve reviewed what they’re likely to use.
If you’re wondering whether you should use an “AI pedestrian accident legal bot” to draft responses, the safer approach is to use any technology for organization—not as a substitute for legal strategy. In Texas, what you say and when you say it can become part of the dispute.


