After sustaining injuries in a car accident, you may feel overwhelmed. The claim settlement process may be hard to navigate as you try to recover from the injuries you have suffered. However, you deserve to get maximum settlement due to your expensive losses such as medical bills, lost wages, car damage, and pain and suffering.
The settlement process in car accident cases can be confusing and frustrating; however, you don’t have to go through it alone. By having aggressive legal representation, you ease your worries and can better focus on your recovery. Your attorney can help you understand how the settlement process works. The following are tips you can consider when negotiating a car accident claim settlement:
Take It Slowly
After a car accident, insurers may make immediate settlement offers to resolve your claim quickly. But you have not determined the full extent of your injuries and losses. Thus, you should settle your claim only after you have reached maximum medical improvement. Rushing to accept an offer from an insurer can result in you not having access to financial resources when your injuries get worse.
Refuse Initial Offers
Insurers want to close out claims quickly for the least amount of money possible. A lot of claimants may fall into this trap as they need money and don’t know their claim’s true value. But lowball settlement offers from an insurance company do not reflect all of your losses. So, it is best to hold out and be patient, so you can get more money later.
Document Your Damages
When you and the insurer negotiate a settlement, the latter requires you to prove your losses from the medical treatment cost to lost wages, emotional distress, and pain and suffering. You need to have proper documentation of these losses. You must have records that detail your condition after the crash and the injuries you have suffered have affected your ability to work and quality of life.
Following Your Doctor’s Orders
Once you get treatment for your injuries, you need to follow through on it. Otherwise, you could damage your accident claim. The insurer may claim that you aggravated your injuries, and so you don’t deserve to be compensated for the full damages you want to recover. Also, the insurer may assert that not following your doctor’s order may mean your injuries are not as serious as you claim. You can avoid these possibilities by following through with your treatment guidelines.