The Mistakes People Regret Most After a Personal Injury

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7 Common Mistakes People Make in Personal Injury Claims - Erik Mullins

Once you’ve been hurt and there’s a chance you’ll be compensated for it, everything changes. What you say, what you do, what you don’t do, all of it matters because people are watching, even if you can’t see them. There are a few mistakes that can quietly undo everything you’re hoping to build. Some of them are small, easy to overlook, but they can cost you real money, credibility, and the chance to be taken seriously. 

Mistake #1: Not Seeing a Doctor Early Enough

“One of the biggest mistakes you can make after getting hurt is thinking you have time,” says personal injury attorney John Duran of New Mexico Accident Firm, LLC.

Maybe you’re sore but not broken, shaken up but not bleeding. You figure you’ll tough it out, give it a few days, see if it passes. That makes sense, until it doesn’t. This is because what you may not feel right away can still be doing real damage beneath the surface, and while your body is processing that trauma, so is everyone else watching your case.

Insurance companies don’t just look at what happened; they look at how you reacted to it. Did you take it seriously? Did you get checked out? Or did you wait too long, creating a timeline gap they can now poke holes in?

Gaps like that are gold for adjusters. They’ll argue you must not have been that hurt, or worse, that something else caused your pain entirely. Seeing a doctor quickly gives your case an anchor point. It shows that you acted, you documented, and you didn’t downplay what your body was trying to tell you.

Mistake #2: Failing to Talk to a Lawyer Early Enough

By the time most folks reach out to a lawyer, they’ve already made a few missteps: they talked to the adjuster, gave a statement they thought was harmless, or waited too long to follow up on medical care. Unfortunately, once something’s been said or left undocumented, you can’t just take it back.

Talking to a lawyer early means you get ahead of the curve. It means someone is preserving what matters, steering you away from mistakes, and making sure the right things are documented the right way.

Mistake #3: Posting on Social Media

There’s nothing wrong with being active on social media. We all share glimpses of our lives like photos with friends, family updates, maybe even a joke or two.

However, if you’ve been injured and you’re in the middle of a claim, posting like everything’s normal can quietly dismantle the very thing you’re trying to prove. While you’re posting for your people, there’s someone else watching too: the insurance company.

They won’t see a photo, they’ll see an opening. That beach selfie? Evidence you’re not in that much pain. That BBQ you stopped by for twenty minutes? Proof you’re “functioning fine.”

It doesn’t matter how you actually felt that day. Context disappears online. Once they’ve grabbed it, they can twist it however they need to make your injuries seem exaggerated or your credibility seem shaky.

Mistake #4: Settling Too Fast

The days after an injury are rough. You’re probably not working. You’re tired, uncomfortable, and trying to keep your head above water while medical bills and regular life costs keep piling up.

So when someone shows up, usually in a suit, smiling, check in hand, offering to make it all go away with one signature, it feels like relief. But that offer wasn’t made out of kindness. It was made because the insurance company knows you’re vulnerable.

Signing that check basically means you will be closing the door. The door to your right to ask for more, even if your injury turns out worse than you thought. And once you cash that check, you can’t go back. That’s why it’s worth pausing. Let a lawyer step in to measure and help you understand what this injury might really cost, not just this month, but long-term.

Conclusion

The road to fair compensation isn’t smooth, but that doesn’t mean it’s out of reach. With the right steps, like early treatment, smart legal help, a quiet social feed, and a little patience, you can protect what matters and build a case that holds up. If this article gave you even a bit of clarity on what to avoid, then you’re already better prepared than most. Keep going. The outcome might take time, but it’s still within your control.

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