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Medical bills are creeping past what the at-fault driver's policy can cover — what now?

I'm still kind of in shock writing this out, but here goes.

My sister was hit by a concrete mixer about six weeks ago — total mess of an intersection accident, and liability has been pretty clearly placed on the other driver. We thought she got off relatively lucky at first: some neck stiffness, a little back pain, sent home with muscle relaxers and told to rest.

Fast forward to last week. She went back because the pain wasn't going away, and after an MRI the doctor is now talking about a herniated disc, possible nerve involvement, and maybe some kind of procedure or even surgery. The bills are already stacking up and we haven't even touched the specialist visits or any potential surgical costs yet.

Here's what's keeping me up at night: the other driver's liability coverage has a cap that we're starting to think might not come close to covering everything. Like, we always assumed insurance would "handle it" and now I'm realizing that's not how it works at all.

Questions I'm genuinely confused about:

  • If her medical costs blow past the at-fault driver's policy limit, is that just... it? She eats the rest?
  • Does her own car insurance play any role here (she has decent coverage)?
  • Should she be keeping every single receipt and document from every appointment?
  • At what point does talking to a personal injury attorney actually make sense?

She's 34, works on her feet all day, and is already missing shifts. I'm trying to help her navigate this because she's overwhelmed and honestly so am I. Any insight from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 16
    humble-stoat-163

    We went through almost exactly this after my mom was rear-ended by a delivery truck. The short answer is that the at-fault driver's policy limit is NOT the end of the road. Her own auto policy likely has something called Underinsured Motorist coverage (UIM) — that can kick in when the other driver's coverage isn't enough. It was a lifesaver for us. Dig out her policy documents tonight and look for that term specifically.

    • 2
      clever-elk-737

      Please, please do not let the at-fault driver's insurance adjuster pressure her into a quick settlement. They know exactly what that policy limit is and some of them will rush an offer before the full medical picture becomes clear. A signed settlement = done, no going back. With a possible herniated disc, the costs could balloon fast.

    • 3
      calm-marmot-375

      To answer one of your specific questions: yes, she should absolutely be saving every single document. Every bill, every EOB from insurance, every prescription receipt, every co-pay. Also a personal injury journal — just a notes app on her phone works — where she logs pain levels, missed work days, things she can't do that she used to. That record matters more than most people realize when it comes time to calculate damages.

    • 9
      bright-lynx-533

      From a medical side — a herniated disc with nerve involvement is not a 'wait and see' situation. Make sure she's following up with a spine specialist, not just her GP. Treatment timelines matter for both her recovery and for documenting the injury properly. Gap in care or delays in treatment can actually be used against her later in claims. Keep those appointments consistent.

  • 14
    bold-crow-922

    Worked claims for years. Here's the honest inside view: when a case starts looking like it might exceed policy limits, things get complicated on our end too. The adjuster isn't necessarily your enemy but their job is to close the file, not make sure your sister is whole. UIM coverage on her own policy is real and worth exploring. Also — her health insurance has likely been paying some of these bills and may have subrogation rights, meaning they could want reimbursement from any settlement. It's a lot of moving parts.

  • 7
    warm-marten-477

    Not legal advice, but this is exactly the scenario where a free consult with a PI attorney is worth doing sooner rather than later. Policy limits, UIM stacking, health insurance liens — these aren't things to try to sort out alone while also dealing with a family member's injury. Most PI attorneys work on contingency so there's no upfront cost. At minimum you'll walk away knowing what you're dealing with.

  • 3
    genuine-seal-599

    Three things: 1) Pull her insurance policy today and find the UIM coverage amount. 2) Stop talking to the other driver's insurance without getting some legal guidance first. 3) Get her into a specialist this week, not next month. Everything else flows from those three.

  • 3
    curious-hare-720

    This sounds so stressful, and it's really kind of you to be advocating for your sister when she's overwhelmed. Just want to say — you're asking the right questions. A lot of people don't even think about coverage limits until it's too late. She's lucky to have someone in her corner.