Before you talk to adjusters or decide what to share, focus on a short checklist that can make or break a claim:
- Get medical care promptly (even if you think it’s “just a bruise”). Delaware claims rely on medical documentation to connect the injury to the incident.
- Take photos immediately if you can do so safely: stair condition, handrails, lighting, shoes/traction issues, and any obstruction on the landing.
- Request the incident report if one was created (common in apartment buildings and commercial settings).
- Write down what you remember while it’s fresh: where you stepped, what you grabbed, whether anything felt loose, and whether others noticed the hazard.
- Avoid recorded statements to insurance without advice. Early “off-the-cuff” answers can be used to dispute severity or causation.
If you’ve been searching for an “AI stair accident lawyer” or “stair injury legal bot,” use that tech only as a memory aid—not as your final guidance. The evidence you preserve early matters more than any automated estimate.


