In the Middleton area, many pedestrian crashes happen around predictable “high-activity” times—school drop-off windows, evening errands, weekend outings, and commutes when visibility and traffic patterns shift quickly. What you do right after the impact can materially affect what insurers later claim.
1) Get medical care—even if symptoms seem mild. Wisconsin injury claims rely heavily on medical documentation. If you were checked at an urgent care or ER, keep discharge paperwork, imaging reports, and follow-up visit notes.
2) Preserve scene evidence before it changes. If the crash involved a crosswalk, turning lane, or a route pedestrians commonly use to access nearby destinations, conditions can change quickly (lights adjusted, signage replaced, vehicles towed). If you’re able, note:
- the intersection/crosswalk location (nearby landmarks are fine)
- weather and lighting at the time
- whether the pedestrian signal was active
- vehicle position and any visible damage
3) Write down what you remember while it’s fresh. Include the moment you first saw the vehicle, what you did to avoid impact (if anything), and what you felt afterward. Even short notes help your case stay consistent.
4) Be careful with statements to insurance. Insurers may ask for a recorded statement or press for details early. In Wisconsin, clarity and consistency matter—answers that seem harmless can become used to minimize fault or injuries.


