Right after a crash, your instinct may be to “handle it” and move on. In pedestrian cases, that can backfire. The first day or two is when evidence and medical documentation matter most.
Focus on: deal-with-the-now priorities
- Get medical care promptly (even if injuries feel minor at first). Delayed symptoms are common.
- Document the scene if you can: traffic signals, crosswalk markings, lighting conditions, weather, and where you entered the roadway.
- Preserve witness information. People often assume they’ll remember details later—then they don’t.
- Write down your timeline while it’s fresh: where you were walking from, where you were headed, and what you noticed about the driver’s approach.
Avoid common Sheboygan-specific problems:
- Local roads can involve mixed lighting—daylight into dusk conditions around commuting times.
- Construction activity and curbside work can affect sightlines and where pedestrians stand while waiting to cross.
If you’re tempted to use a tool that promises “instant answers,” remember: a good claim still depends on what happened on that specific street corner that day.


