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What Happens in the First 30 Days After You Hire a Car Accident Lawyer

If you have just retained a car accident lawyer, you may be wondering what happens next. Understanding what happens after hiring a car accident lawyer is one of the most common questions new clients ask. The first 30 days of representation are not idle time. Your attorney is moving on several fronts at once to build and protect your claim before evidence disappears and insurance deadlines pass.

This article provides general legal information; consult a licensed Illinois attorney for advice specific to your situation.

Step 1: The Retention Letter and Contingency Fee Agreement

The engagement formally begins when you and your attorney sign a contingency fee agreement. Under Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct Rule 1.5, contingency fee arrangements must be in writing and must clearly state the percentage the attorney will earn, how expenses are handled, and what happens if the case settles versus goes to trial.

Two costs are involved in a personal injury case and they work differently. Attorney fees are a percentage of the recovery — you pay nothing unless money is recovered. Litigation expenses (filing fees, medical records costs, expert fees) are typically advanced by the attorney and later deducted from the settlement or verdict. Your fee agreement should spell out both. Read it carefully before signing and ask your attorney to walk through any language you do not understand.

Step 2: Letters of Representation to All Insurers

Within the first few days, your attorney will send a letter of representation to every insurer involved. This includes the at-fault driver’s liability carrier, your own insurer if you have uninsured or underinsured motorist coverage, and any other carrier that may be on the hook. Under the Health Care Services Lien Act (770 ILCS 23), your attorney will also begin tracking any medical liens — amounts that your health insurer or a hospital may claim against your eventual recovery.

Once a letter of representation is on file, insurers are required to communicate with your attorney rather than directly with you. If an adjuster calls you after representation is established, you can simply refer them to your lawyer. You are not obligated to speak with the opposing insurer once you have legal representation.

Step 3: Certified Policy Limits Request

One of the first strategic moves your attorney makes is a certified written request to the at-fault driver’s insurer for disclosure of the policy limits. Illinois law under 215 ILCS 5/143.24b requires the insurer to respond. Knowing the coverage limits early shapes the entire strategy. If the policy is too small to cover your injuries, your attorney will begin investigating whether you have underinsured motorist coverage, whether additional defendants exist, or whether other insurance sources may apply.

Step 4: Medical Records Requests and Ongoing Treatment

Your attorney will send medical authorization forms for you to sign so the firm can request records from every provider who treated you — the emergency room, primary care physician, any specialists, physical therapists, and imaging centers. Gathering complete records takes time because hospitals and clinics often have their own processing timelines. Your attorney cannot fully evaluate your claim without understanding the full scope of your injuries and treatment.

Continuing your recommended medical treatment consistently during this period matters. Gaps in treatment are one of the most common arguments insurers use to minimize a claim. Follow your doctor’s instructions, attend all appointments, and keep your attorney informed of any new symptoms or diagnoses.

Step 5: Preservation and Spoliation Letters

If any relevant evidence might be in the control of a third party, your attorney will send a spoliation or preservation letter demanding that the evidence be retained. Common examples include dashboard camera footage from the at-fault vehicle, surveillance video from nearby businesses, black box data from commercial trucks, and any maintenance or inspection records. This letter puts the other party on legal notice that the evidence is relevant and must not be destroyed. Failure to preserve after notice can result in sanctions or adverse-inference instructions at trial.

These steps together form the foundation of your claim. Handling car accident claims in Chicago involves many moving parts in the early weeks, and your attorney’s job is to make sure nothing is missed while you focus on your recovery.

What You Should Be Doing in the First 30 Days

While your attorney handles the legal work, your role is to get better and stay organized. Keep a journal documenting your daily pain levels, any activities you cannot do, and how the injury affects your work and family life. Save all receipts related to the accident — medical co-pays, prescription costs, transportation to appointments, and any out-of-pocket expenses. If you miss work, document the hours and wages lost. This information will support the damages calculation later.

Avoid posting about the accident or your injuries on social media. Insurance adjusters and defense attorneys routinely review plaintiffs’ social media accounts. A photo of you attending a family gathering can be taken out of context and used to undermine your injury claims.

Talk to a Chicago Attorney — Free Consultation

If you were injured in a car accident and want to understand what the legal process looks like from day one, Phillips Law Offices is available to walk you through it. Call (312) 346-4262 or visit our contact page to schedule a free consultation. There is no fee unless we recover money for you.

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