The days after a pedestrian accident can determine whether evidence survives and whether your medical care is properly documented.
Do this first:
- Get medical care right away (even if you feel “mostly okay”). Texas juries and insurers look closely at timing.
- Report the crash when required and make sure the responding officer documents pedestrian-related details.
- Capture scene evidence if you can safely do so: vehicle location, crosswalk/curb area, lighting, and any visible traffic control.
- Write down what you remember while it’s fresh—what the driver did, where you were crossing, and whether you saw the vehicle before impact.
Avoid these common mistakes:
- Waiting to seek treatment and letting symptoms “explain themselves.”
- Relying on a quick verbal reassurance from the other side or their insurance.
- Giving recorded statements before you’ve reviewed medical findings and the full crash story.
If the driver fled, evidence preservation becomes even more important—surveillance footage and vehicle identification details may disappear quickly.


