Your next 30–60 minutes matter more than most people realize. Leeds residents often assume “someone will handle it,” but insurance timelines move fast.
- Get medical care immediately (even if you think it’s minor). Alabama does not require you to “prove pain” with guesswork—documentation does the heavy lifting.
- Request the accident report if law enforcement responded. If not, write down what you can: time, location, direction of travel, and what each vehicle was doing.
- Capture evidence on the spot when it’s safe: photos of lane position, skid marks, traffic signals, vehicle damage, and any visible injuries.
- Preserve rideshare details (trip time, pickup/drop-off, driver info). These details can disappear from apps or become harder to confirm as days pass.
- Be careful with statements to insurers. A short comment can be treated like a “fact” and repeated in ways you didn’t intend.
If you’re tempted to use an AI Uber/Lyft accident intake tool to “speed things up,” that can be helpful for organizing your story—but it shouldn’t replace legal review of liability and insurance coverage.


