
An insurer's first settlement number is an opening bid, not a full evaluation of your personal injury claim. It is designed to close a file quickly before the full medical picture and losses are clear.
Early offers often arrive before you reach maximum medical improvement. Settling too soon can leave out future treatment, lost wages, and the day to day impact of pain that develops over time.
Adjusters may downplay symptoms, point to prior injuries, or frame you as partly at fault. They might focus on the smallest set of medical records, ignore non economic damages, or rush you to sign a broad release.
Policy limits and quick payout authority can also shape what you see first. Initial figures rarely reflect future care, reduced earning capacity, or the real effect on family and daily life.
Take your time. Do not accept or sign anything while you are still treating. Keep a simple log of symptoms, missed work, and out of pocket costs so nothing gets missed.
Protect evidence early. Save photos and videos, request any available store or dashcam footage, and collect witness names. Ask your providers to note causation and work or activity restrictions in the chart.
A fair evaluation considers medical bills, expected care, time off work, and how injuries limit your activities. Consistent treatment and clear documentation usually increase credibility and help align offers with reality.
Partial fault does not end a claim in California. Honest discussions about what happened, along with strong evidence, often reduce insurer attempts to overstate your share of responsibility.
GOC Legal clients work directly with Greg O'Connell, a former Alameda County prosecutor who builds cases with a trial mindset. That focus, plus documented policy limit results after small opening offers, often moves negotiations toward full value without adding stress for you.