The moments after a car accident in Florida can feel overwhelming — adrenaline is pumping, you may be in pain, and dozens of urgent decisions have to be made at the worst possible time. What you do (and don't do) in those first 24 hours can make the difference between a full, fair recovery and a lowball settlement you'll regret for years.
This guide walks you through exactly what to do, step by step, based on Florida law — so you protect both your health and your right to compensation.
Step 1: Call 911 and Stay at the Scene
Your first call after a Florida car accident should always be to 911. Request both law enforcement and emergency medical services, even if injuries seem minor. This is critical for two reasons: your health may be more serious than you realize, and a police report is one of the most important documents in your injury claim.
Under Florida Statute § 316.027, any driver involved in an accident causing injury, death, or property damage over $500 is legally required to remain at the scene and report the crash. Leaving — even if you think it was a minor fender-bender — can result in criminal charges.
- Move your vehicle only if it is creating a safety hazard and it is safe to do so
- Turn on hazard lights and set up emergency flares or triangles if available
- Stay calm, do not admit fault, and do not apologize — anything you say can be used against you
Step 2: Seek Medical Attention Right Away
This is one of the most important steps, and the one most people skip. In the aftermath of an accident, your body releases adrenaline and endorphins that can mask pain and injury for hours — sometimes days. Common injuries like whiplash, herniated discs, traumatic brain injuries, and internal bleeding may not produce obvious symptoms immediately.
From a legal standpoint, insurance companies look closely at the gap between the accident and your first medical visit. If you waited three days, they will argue your injuries are not serious — or that they happened somewhere else. Going to the ER or urgent care within 24 hours creates an objective, time-stamped medical record that ties your injuries directly to the crash.
- Accept EMS treatment at the scene if offered — never refuse
- If you're not transported by ambulance, go to the ER or urgent care the same day
- Tell your doctor about every symptom, no matter how minor — headache, neck stiffness, dizziness, back pain
- Follow all treatment recommendations and keep every appointment
Step 3: Document Everything at the Scene
Before vehicles are moved and before the scene is cleaned up, document everything with your smartphone. Insurance adjusters and defense attorneys weren't there — photos and video are often the most powerful evidence in a car accident case.
- All vehicles — damage on all sides, including undercarriage if possible
- License plates of all involved vehicles
- Skid marks, debris, and fluid trails on the road
- Traffic signs, signals, and road conditions near the crash point
- Your visible injuries — bruises, cuts, swelling
- Weather conditions — rain, glare, low visibility
- Wide-angle video panning the full scene and surrounding area
- Any traffic or security cameras in the area — note their location before leaving
Step 4: Exchange Information — and Collect Witness Contacts
Before anyone leaves, collect the following from every driver involved in the crash:
- Full legal name and date of birth
- Driver's license number and state
- Insurance company name, policy number, and claims phone number
- Vehicle make, model, year, and license plate
- Phone number and home address
Also collect the contact information of every witness — name, phone number, and email. Witness accounts are invaluable, and people's memories fade fast. The police report will include witness information, but getting it directly is also smart.
If the police respond, ask the officer for the report number and how to obtain a copy of the official crash report. In Florida, you can obtain a copy through the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (FLHSMV).
Step 5: Notify Your Insurance Company — But Know Your Rights
Florida is a no-fault insurance state, which means you will first file a claim with your own insurance company under your Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage — regardless of who caused the accident. Your policy likely requires prompt notification of any accident, so report it the same day.
However, there is a critical distinction between notifying your insurer and giving a recorded statement. You are not required to give a recorded statement — and doing so before speaking with an attorney can seriously damage your claim.
| ✅ What You Can Do | 🚫 What to Avoid |
|---|---|
| Notify your own insurer the accident occurred | Give a recorded statement to any insurer |
| Provide basic facts: date, location, vehicles involved | Accept any settlement offer before consulting an attorney |
| Ask for a claim number and adjuster contact | Sign any documents or medical release forms |
| Request a copy of your own policy | Agree to speak with the other driver's insurer alone |
| Consult with a personal injury attorney first | Speculate about fault or how injuries "might" heal |
Step 6: Contact a Florida Personal Injury Attorney
This step should happen within the first 24 hours — ideally before you speak with any insurance adjuster. A Florida personal injury attorney can immediately take critical actions you cannot do alone:
- Send evidence preservation letters to secure camera footage before it's deleted
- Handle all communication with insurance companies on your behalf
- Obtain the official police report and begin building your case file
- Connect you with the right medical specialists and document your care properly
- Evaluate the full value of your claim — including future medical costs and lost income — before anyone pressures you to settle
At Duncan Injury Group, we have recovered over $250 million for injury victims across Florida, Texas, and Arizona. Our consultations are completely free, and we only charge a fee if we win your case.
Step 7: Create a Personal Injury Log
Starting the day of the accident, keep a daily written log. This documentation is powerful evidence for "pain and suffering" compensation — a category that is often the largest part of a settlement but the hardest to prove without contemporaneous records.
Your log should include:
- A detailed account of the accident while the memory is fresh
- Every symptom you experience each day, even if it seems minor
- How your injuries affect daily life: sleep, work, household tasks, hobbies, relationships
- Every medical appointment, medication, and treatment
- Every day of work you miss or hours you lose
- Out-of-pocket expenses related to the accident
Florida Car Accident Law: What You Need to Know
Florida's No-Fault Insurance System
Florida is one of a handful of no-fault states. This means after a crash, your own Personal Injury Protection (PIP) coverage pays your initial medical bills and lost wages — up to the policy limits — regardless of fault. Most Florida drivers carry $10,000 in PIP coverage.
However, PIP has limits. If your injuries meet a certain severity threshold — permanent injury, significant scarring, or death — you can step outside the no-fault system and sue the at-fault driver directly for full compensation, including pain and suffering.
Florida's 2-Year Statute of Limitations
For car accidents occurring on or after March 24, 2023, Florida's statute of limitations for personal injury negligence claims is two years from the date of the accident. Miss this deadline and your claim is barred permanently — no exceptions. Don't wait.
Comparative Fault in Florida
Florida follows a modified comparative negligence rule (as of 2023). If you are found more than 50% at fault for the accident, you cannot recover damages. If you are 30% at fault, your award is reduced by 30%. This is why it is so important not to admit fault at the scene or to an insurance adjuster.
Your 24-Hour Car Accident Checklist
| Action | When | Done? |
|---|---|---|
| Call 911 and stay at the scene | Immediately | □ |
| Accept or seek EMS medical evaluation | At scene / same day | □ |
| Photograph all vehicles, injuries, and scene | At scene | □ |
| Record video of the full scene | At scene | □ |
| Exchange info with all drivers | At scene | □ |
| Collect witness contact information | At scene | □ |
| Note any nearby cameras (businesses, traffic) | At scene | □ |
| Get police report number | At scene | □ |
| Go to ER or urgent care | Same day | □ |
| Notify your own insurance company | Same day | □ |
| Call Duncan Injury Group — free consultation | Same day | □ |
| Start your personal injury log | Same day | □ |
| Do NOT give recorded statements | Until you have an attorney | □ |
| Do NOT accept any settlement offers | Until you have an attorney | □ |

