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Insurance giving me an ultimatum: take their offer or go to their doctor. What would you do?

So I'm about eight months out from a rear-end collision that left me with some pretty serious whiplash and what my neurologist is calling post-concussion symptoms — headaches, brain fog, sensitivity to light, the whole nightmare package. I'm still actively in treatment. Physical therapy twice a week and regular neurology follow-ups.

Out of nowhere the at-fault driver's insurance calls and basically says I have two choices: accept a settlement they're calling their "absolute maximum" or submit to an Independent Medical Exam with a doctor they chose and schedule.

I've done some reading and the words "independent" feel like a joke. From what I understand these examiners are hired regularly by insurance companies and have a financial incentive to say you're fine and don't need more treatment.

Here's my specific worry: my neurologist says post-concussion syndrome timelines are genuinely unpredictable. Some people plateau in a few months, others deal with symptoms for a year or more. If I take the settlement and my symptoms drag on longer than expected, I'm stuck — right? There's no going back once you sign.

But if I go to their IME and this doctor has zero background in concussion cases, he could just declare me recovered and they use that to cut off everything.

I pushed back on the number twice already and they budged a little both times, which honestly makes me think it's not actually their ceiling.

Has anyone else been in this exact spot? Did you take the offer, go to the IME, or find another path entirely? I feel like I'm being forced into a bad decision on a tight deadline and I really don't know what to do.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 15
    brave-finch-718

    As someone who works in a rehab setting, post-concussion syndrome is genuinely one of the harder things to put a timeline on. Your neurologist is right — it is unpredictable. Settling before you've hit a stable recovery point (what we call 'maximum medical improvement') can seriously shortchange you. Please don't let an insurance deadline override your actual medical timeline.

  • 14
    quick-stoat-461

    A few things worth knowing — not legal advice, just process stuff. First, you can typically request the IME doctor's credentials and specialty ahead of time. If they're not experienced with neurological or concussion cases, that's a documented concern. Second, signing a full and final release almost always means you cannot reopen the claim no matter what happens later. Make sure you understand exactly what you're releasing before you sign anything. Most PI attorneys offer free consults and can at least tell you if the number is in the right ballpark.

  • 13
    calm-elk-009

    Get a PI lawyer before you do anything else. Most work on contingency so it costs you nothing upfront. You can always still settle — you just do it with someone in your corner who does this every day. Going up against an insurance company alone when there are ongoing medical issues involved is a tough spot to be in.

  • 8
    bright-otter-807

    I worked on the claims side for years, so I'll be straight with you. IMEs are almost never truly neutral. The doctors who do them regularly get a LOT of referrals from insurers and they know which way their bread is buttered. That doesn't mean every IME goes badly, but for something as subjective and unpredictable as post-concussion syndrome, I'd be very cautious. A one-hour exam is not going to capture what your treating neurologist has documented over months.

  • 5
    bold-stoat-677

    I was in almost this exact situation after my accident two years ago. They pulled the same "this is our final offer" line and I almost caved. Ended up getting a PI attorney involved and the number changed significantly after that. The "final offer" stopped being so final real quick.

    • 14
      clear-marmot-629

      "Absolute maximum" is one of the most overused phrases in an adjuster's playbook. They say it to create urgency so you stop negotiating. The fact that they moved twice when you pushed back basically proves they have more room. Don't let the deadline panic you into signing something you'll regret when you're still symptomatic six months from now.

  • 3
    calm-crane-786

    Quick question — is this coming from your own insurance's MedPay or UM coverage, or from the at-fault driver's insurer? The dynamics are a little different depending on which, and it might affect how much leverage you actually have here. Also, do you have any documentation from your neurologist projecting how much longer treatment is expected to continue?

  • 2
    humble-swan-386

    The brain fog and light sensitivity stuff alone sounds so exhausting on top of trying to navigate all this insurance mess. Please don't let them rush you. You deserve time to actually figure out what your recovery is going to look like before you close the door on any future help.