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personal injury evidence

Personal Injury Evidence Guide — What to Collect and Why

Complete guide to personal injury evidence. Learn exactly what documentation to gather, how to preserve it, and why each piece matters for your claim.

Personal Injury Evidence: The Complete Collection Guide

Evidence wins personal injury cases. The quality and quantity of your documentation directly impacts your settlement value. Start collecting immediately after any accident.

The Golden Rule: Document Everything

The first 24 hours after an accident are the most important. Memory fades, evidence disappears, and witnesses move on.

Category 1: Scene Evidence

At the accident scene: - Photos of all vehicles (damage, positions, license plates) - Photos of road conditions (wet, icy, debris, signage) - Photos of any property damage - Video of the overall scene - Traffic signal positions - Skid marks

Later: - Return to the scene if safe to take more photos - Check if businesses nearby have security cameras

Category 2: Injury Documentation

  • Photos of all visible injuries immediately after the accident
  • Daily photos as injuries evolve (bruising changes color — document it)
  • Photos before surgery and after
  • Photos of scars and permanent marks
  • Video of any mobility limitations

Category 3: Medical Records

DocumentWhy It Matters
ER recordsEstablishes injury occurred
Diagnostic results (X-rays, MRI)Objective evidence of injury
All doctor's notesDocuments treatment course
Physical therapy recordsShows rehabilitation effort
Prescription receiptsDocuments medication costs
Bills from all providersEstablishes economic damages
Future treatment estimatesSupports future damages claim

Get your records early — they can take weeks to obtain.

Category 4: Financial Evidence

  • Pay stubs (before and after injury, to show lost wages)
  • Tax returns for self-employed income loss
  • Invoices for services you now need to hire out (cleaning, childcare)
  • Receipts for all out-of-pocket expenses
  • Insurance EOBs (explanation of benefits)

Category 5: Witness Information

  • Full name, phone, email of all witnesses
  • Written or recorded statements immediately (memories fade quickly)
  • Contact information from police officers at the scene

Category 6: Official Reports

  • Police accident report (critical for car accidents)
  • Workplace incident reports
  • Premises incident reports (from businesses, hotels, etc.)
  • Fire department reports
  • OSHA reports for workplace accidents

Category 7: Personal Impact Documentation

Keep a daily journal noting: - Pain levels (1-10 scale) - Activities you cannot do - Sleep disruption - Emotional impact - How injury affects relationships and enjoyment of life

This "pain journal" has real dollar value in your settlement.

What to Preserve

  • Clothing worn at time of accident (don't wash it)
  • Shoes worn during a slip and fall
  • Any defective product that caused injury
  • Damaged personal property

Final Verdict

Evidence collection starts at the accident scene and never really stops until your case resolves. The more documentation you have, the stronger your negotiating position. When in doubt, document it — you can always not use evidence you have, but you can't get evidence you didn't collect.

For informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Consult a licensed attorney.