If you’ve recently been injured and wondering when the best time to settle an auto accident is, the answer is quite simple but it will be different for almost everyone.  In general, you should only settle when you’re ready and you have an accurate guess of how much any injuries you sustained in the crash will cost you.  However, be careful not to wait too long before you settle if you have suffered serious injuries with on going physical therapy because you might risk running out the statute of limitations on your case, leaving you with no money.  You generally have around two years to file your claims in most states if you are an adult.  Make sure you’ve done the proper research and found out all of the details that pertain to your particular accident and how it pertains to your settlement.

Generally, you would like to settle with the insurance company later rather than sooner if you can afford it.  Settling later, when your physical therapy is complete from the accident and all the repairs are done to your car with give you an accurate amount of how much the auto accident actually cost you.  Settling before this time could leave you high and dry if your therapy runs into complications that weren’t foreseen when you tried to guess how much your therapy would actually cost before you were completely healed.  Don’t forget that by settling you are forfeiting all of your future possible legal actions against the insurance company, so you will have no legal way to collect more damages after the settlement.

Definitely never attempt to settle an auto accident when you are not ready.  Even if insurance adjusters are sending you letters and calling you at home, make sure that you have all your paperwork in order and have an accurate idea of how much you would ultimately like to get in an auto accident settlement before you meet face to face with the adjuster.  This will allow you to bargain better and strike a  better deal with the insurance company.  Generally, you will also never want to jump at the first offer an insurance adjuster offers you because this will more often than not be a low ball offer for negotiation purposes.

Once you’ve got all your paperwork in order and have the most accurate idea that you can get of the total damage that the car accident inflicted on you, you be in, sometimes heated, negotiations with the insurance company.  Most of these negotiations are tied up relatively smoothly, but some may hit a brick wall with both sides being unable to come to an agreement.  This may make the insurance adjuster make a “final offer” to you that you must decide to accept or take the case to court.  If the offer is within the range that you originally thought was fair, by all means accept it.

However, if the offer isn’t in the range that you thought was acceptable, there’s are many things that you can still do.  First, ask the adjuster point blank if this is the best offer and if it is really take it or leave it.  Pay very close attention to his answer.  Most adjusters won’t lie, but they can talk around the truth by saying something such as “this is the final offer I am authorized to give.”  This opens up the potential that the insurance company may be still willing to negotiate if you go over the adjuster’s head to his supervisor.

Figuring out when the best time to settle a auto accident injury claim is can be tricky.  Try to make yourself as well informed as you possibly can, have a good idea of the range of offers you think are fair and make sure that you stick to them.  If you hit a roadblock and are considering going to court, be completely honest with yourself about what your chances are.  Will a court award enough money to cover the costs of hiring a lawyer and paying the applicable court fees?  If not, you may instead want to take the insurance adjuster’s final offer.

If you have been injured in an auto accident, you are entitled to seek damages from the other party as long as you are not one hundred percent at fault. This means, if it was determined that you were held seventy-five percent of the blame for the accident, you can still seek an auto accident injury settlement for up to twenty-five percent of your medical bills. However, you must be careful when trying to fill out your car accident claim because you may open yourself up to further lawsuits if you press your case too hard.

What To Do After the Accident

If you’ve been injured in an auto accident there are several things that you can do from the time of the accident onward that will insure you get the proper settlement amount.  First, get a ticket from the police officer showing who was at fault for the accident.  Immediately after this, seek medical attention if you feel like you’ve been injured. Insurance companies consider you injured if you seek treatment.   So make sure to do this immediately to remove any doubt that the injury actually happened after the accident.  Keep a copy of every visit to make to the doctor’s office for your records.  In addition to medical bills, also keep track of lost wages, check stubs, and any property damage that was incurred.  Finally, make sure to immediately write down the details of the accident so you can keep your story straight later.

When the Car insurance company of the driver that hit you contacts you, make sure to tell them that you are getting treatment. Don’t give them a recorded statement at this time either, it is not mandatory.  Make sure that as you are receiving treatment, you continue to keep track of all your medical records and amounts of lost pay.

Bargaining Your Auto Accident Injury Settlement

When you finally go to settle with the insurance company, you are able to collect damages for the percentage of the accident that was not your fault. So if the accident was one hundred percent the other drivers fault, you can collect damages for all your medical bills. There are no maximum or minimum car crash settlement amounts.

broken legDetermining the value of your medical records in a settlement may be very straightforward, but if you are entitled to pain and suffering compensation it can be harder to come up with dollar amount that accurate reflects what the accident cost you.  Pain and suffering losses are determined by both financial loss and mental anguish caused by the accident. Age, extent of liability, your medical prognosis, and how bad your injuries are all play into what your pain and suffering damages will be.  In smaller cases, you may be able to come up with this dollar amount on your own.  However, with larger cases you should invest the help of a lawyer who has experience determining what kind of damages you are able to collect.

Getting the right amount of money for your automobile accident injury settlement can be very tricky. If you have a large case involving severe injuries, it is highly advisable to enlist the help of a lawyer to help with your accident claim. If the case is smaller, or you share some of the blame, make sure you think twice about actually submitting the case. You could be opening yourself up to future lawsuits for your percentage of the damages and the damages you do receive may not be worth the court costs.