I Already Talked to the Adjuster. Did I Mess Up My Case?
The adjuster called, sounded friendly, and you answered their questions — maybe even gave a recorded statement. Now you're wondering if you just torpedoed your own case. First: don't panic. Here's the straight version.
What the adjuster was actually doing
Insurance adjusters work for the insurance company, not for you. A recorded statement isn't a formality — it's a chance to lock you into details, get you to downplay injuries ("I'm fine, just sore"), or admit partial fault before you know the facts. That's not friendliness; it's the job.
So did you mess up?
Usually it's not fatal. One early statement rarely ends a legitimate claim — but it can be used to chip away at it. The fix is to stop volunteering information and get someone in your corner before the next conversation.
Your next moves
- Don't give any more statements until you've talked to someone on your side.
- Don't accept a quick offer — early lowballs are the whole game.
- Get your own medical record going, even if you brushed it off at first.
- Get a free case review to understand what you actually have.
Related reading
- Should you accept the first settlement offer?
- The full plain-English guide: NYC Injury Line.
Accidents Happen NYC is an intake and referral service from the Law Office of James Medows. Mr. Medows doesn't personally handle injury cases; with your written consent we connect you with an experienced injury attorney, and a referral never increases your total fee. General info, not legal advice.
Attorney advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. This article is general information, not legal advice.