Right after a rideshare accident, your immediate decisions can affect whether your claim is accepted and how insurers value your injuries.
- Get medical care (even if you feel “mostly okay”). Illinois law doesn’t require you to “prove pain” on the spot, but insurers often look for treatment records to confirm injury and causation.
- Report the crash if there’s injury, property damage, or disputes. A police report can become a key piece of the timeline later.
- Capture ride details while they’re still easy to access. Screenshot your trip receipt, driver name/photo, pickup/drop-off locations, and the time/date.
- Document the scene. In Yorkville, that can mean noting traffic signals, lane layout, weather conditions, and whether construction activity or detours were present.
- Be cautious with statements. You may be asked to explain what happened before you’ve had a chance to review medical findings or app data.
If you want to use “AI” tools to organize information, that can help—but it should not replace careful legal review of what you say and what records you preserve.


