Texas claims rise or fall on early facts. After an incident, focus on actions that protect your health and your case:
- Get medical care right away (even if you think it’s minor). Delayed treatment can make causation harder to prove.
- Document the hazard while it’s still there: take photos/videos of the condition, the lighting, the entry/exit path, and anything around it (wet floors, broken steps, debris, missing signage).
- Write down the details before they fade: date/time, what you were doing, how you fell/tripped, weather/lighting conditions, and whether anyone saw it.
- Report it to the property if you can do so safely. If it’s an apartment or managed property, ask for the incident to be logged.
- Save every cost and communication: ER/clinic paperwork, prescriptions, follow-up visits, ride receipts, and any messages/emails about the incident.
If you’re considering tech-assisted intake (like an AI-guided questionnaire), treat it as an organization tool—not as a substitute for attorney review of your evidence and timeline.


