EPISODE · Jun 25, 2026 · 4 MIN
Can You Still File a Claim Days After a Car Accident in Florida?
from McCue Firm Podcast Personal Injury Attorney St. Petersburg FL
Hi everyone! Kelly McCue here, owner of The Law Office of Kelly McCue based in St. Petersburg. If you’ve been in a minor fender-bender on the Sunshine Skyway or a collision near downtown Clearwater, your first instinct might be to just go home and process what happened. It is incredibly common to wait a few days before thinking about insurance, especially if you think your vehicle damage is minor or you are just feeling a little stiff. Understanding how the clock works immediately after a crash is vital to your financial and physical future because Florida has some of the strictest legal deadlines in the country. Delaying your claim or medical evaluation by even a few days can completely alter your ability to get your medical bills covered, potentially leaving you on the hook for thousands of dollars out of pocket. The absolute most critical deadline to understand when deciding whether to file a claim days after an accident is Florida’s 14-day Personal Injury Protection (PIP) rule. Under Florida law, you must seek initial medical treatment from a qualified provider—like a medical doctor, chiropractor, or emergency room—within exactly 14 days of the crash. If you wait until day 15 because you thought your neck pain would just go away, you completely forfeit your right to access the $10,000 in PIP medical benefits you have been paying for in your insurance premiums. The insurance companies do not care if you had a good excuse or didn’t realize you were seriously hurt; the statute is unyielding, and missing it gives your insurer a free pass to deny your medical claims. Many people delay filing a claim because adrenaline and shock mask pain immediately after a wreck. Soft tissue injuries, whiplash, and concussions frequently take days to fully manifest as inflammation sets in. If you wait to report the accident, insurance adjusters in Tampa or Largo will use that gap in time as a weapon against you. They will argue that if you were truly injured, you would have gone to a doctor or filed a claim immediately. Filing your claim and getting evaluated by a professional as soon as possible creates an unbroken paper trail linking your injuries directly to the crash. Beyond the immediate 14-day medical window, there is the timeline for filing a personal injury lawsuit against the at-fault driver. Florida recently shortened this statute of limitations for negligence claims from four years down to two years. Building a winning case requires gathering traffic camera footage, police reports, and witness statements before they disappear. Furthermore, under Florida’s modified comparative negligence rules, insurance companies are highly motivated to push the blame onto you. If they can get you to make statements days after the accident before you’ve spoken to a lawyer, they can use your words to slash the compensation you are owed. This is why partnering with a dedicated local advocate right away is so important. When you hire my firm, we take over the burden of dealing with the insurance adjusters from day one. We ensure that your claim is filed correctly, your medical treatment is properly documented within the legal windows, and your rights are protected against predatory insurance tactics. Best of all, because we work on a contingency fee basis, there are no fees or costs unless we win your case. You do not have to worry about upfront legal bills while you are trying to recover from an accident in Pinellas, Hillsborough, or Pasco county. If you are sitting at home a few days after a crash wondering if it is too late, the answer is no—but you need to act immediately. Every day you wait gives the insurance company more leverage to devalue your claim. Until next time, this is Kelly McCue reminding you, if you’re dealing with this right now, you don’t have to figure it out alone. Call me at 727-873-0910 and get clear answers today.
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Can You Still File a Claim Days After a Car Accident in Florida?
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