After a Georgia car crash, the insurance adjuster on the other end of the line is not your friend, no matter how friendly they sound. They are a trained professional whose job is to close your claim for as little money as possible. They will be polite. They will ask how you are feeling. They may even sound sympathetic. But every question they ask and every form they send you serves the same goal: paying you less. Understanding the insurance company playbook is the first step to protecting your claim. The trial team at Schneider Williamson Car Accident & Personal Injury Attorneys deals with these carriers every day, and this guide explains what to expect and how to respond.
Two Different Insurance Companies, Two Different Conversations
After a Georgia accident, you will likely deal with at least two insurance carriers: your own and the at-fault driver’s. Your obligations to each are very different.
To your own carrier, you generally owe a duty of cooperation under your policy. You have to report the accident, provide basic facts, and cooperate with the claims investigation. This includes uninsured or underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) claims if the at-fault driver lacked sufficient coverage.
To the at-fault driver’s carrier, you owe nothing. You are not their customer, you have no contract with them, and you are under no obligation to give them a recorded statement, sign their authorization forms, or even speak to them. This is a critical distinction that many injured Georgians do not realize.
Common Tactics Adjusters Use
The same handful of tactics shows up across nearly every Sandy Springs car accident and Sandy Springs truck accident claim.
The fast call. Adjusters often call within hours or days of the crash, before injuries have fully developed and before you have had time to think. They want a recorded statement while your memory is rushed and incomplete, and ideally before you have spoken to a lawyer.
The recorded statement trap. Anything you say in a recorded statement can be used to limit your claim. An adjuster may ask seemingly innocent questions like “How are you feeling today?” hoping you will say “Fine” so they can argue at trial that you admitted you were not really hurt.
The blanket medical authorization. The adjuster sends a form that lets them request your entire medical history going back decades. They are not interested in records that help you. They are looking for any prior complaint that they can blame your current symptoms on, a tactic discussed further in our evidence guide.
The quick lowball offer. Within days or weeks of the crash, before treatment is complete, the carrier may offer a small settlement. Accepting it requires you to sign a release that ends the case forever, including for injuries that get worse later.
The delay game. When fast offers do not work, adjusters switch to delay. Calls go unreturned, requests for documents pile up, and weeks turn into months. The longer they delay, the more pressure mounts on the injured person to settle for less.
The fault flip. Insurance carriers know Georgia’s modified comparative negligence rule, discussed in our comparative fault guide, and they will push to assign as much blame to you as possible to reduce or eliminate your recovery.
What to Say and What Not to Say
When you must speak to an insurance adjuster, keep it short. Give your name, the date and location of the accident, and a brief statement that the other driver caused the crash. Decline to give a recorded statement. Decline to sign medical authorizations. Decline to discuss your injuries beyond saying you are still under medical care.
Avoid these specific phrases that adjusters love to hear: “I’m sorry,” “I’m fine,” “I didn’t see them coming,” “I was distracted,” and any version of “I think it was probably my fault.” Even casual conversational filler can be quoted out of context later.
Watch Out for Bad Faith
Georgia law imposes duties on insurance carriers to handle claims in good faith. Under O.C.G.A. § 33-4-6, an insurer that refuses to pay a covered claim in bad faith can be liable for additional damages and attorney’s fees. Bad faith is most often pursued against a claimant’s own insurance carrier in UM/UIM disputes, but the duty also affects how third-party carriers handle settlement demands within policy limits. A failure to settle a clear case for available limits can expose a carrier to liability for any excess verdict.
How a Lawyer Changes the Conversation
Once a lawyer enters the picture, the dynamic shifts immediately. All communication runs through the firm. Recorded statement requests are denied. Medical authorizations get narrowed to relevant providers only. Settlement discussions move from informal phone calls to written demands backed by full medical records, expense documentation, and a litigation timeline. Carriers respond to lawyers very differently than they respond to unrepresented claimants, and the data consistently bears this out across Dunwoody personal injury matters, premises liability cases, and every other category we handle.
File a Complaint If Necessary
If an insurance carrier is acting in bad faith, the Georgia Office of Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner accepts consumer complaints and can investigate. This regulatory pressure does not replace a private claim, but it can be a useful additional tool in stubborn cases.
Get Help Before You Sign Anything
The single most important rule when dealing with insurance companies after a Georgia accident is this: do not sign anything until you have spoken with a lawyer. A free consultation costs nothing and can save you tens of thousands of dollars. Request a free consultation, there is no fee unless we recover for you.