Confused after a car accident in Jacksonville? Our 2026 guide provides essential steps on safety, documentation, and protecting your injury claim.

What to Do After a Car Accident in Jacksonville: A 2026 Guide

Car accidents happen without warning, and in a city like Jacksonville, with its busy interstates, packed surface streets, and heavy commuter traffic, they happen more often than most people realize. When one happens to you, the moments that follow are disorienting. Your adrenaline is high, your mind is racing, and decisions that can have lasting consequences need to be made quickly.

What you do, and what you avoid doing, in the hours and days after a crash can significantly affect both your health and your ability to recover fair compensation. This guide walks you through exactly what to do after a car accident in Jacksonville in 2026.

Step 1: Check for Injuries and Make Sure Everyone Is Safe

Your first priority is safety. Before anything else, check yourself and anyone else in the vehicle. If someone is injured, call 911 immediately. Even if the crash seems minor, request law enforcement at the scene.

If the accident is minor and vehicles are blocking traffic, Florida law generally allows you to move them to a safer position. However, if there are serious injuries, significant property damage, or questions about fault, it is best to leave everything in place until police arrive. Moving vehicles prematurely could destroy critical evidence.

Turn on your hazard lights, stay calm, and wait for help if needed.

Step 2: Call 911 and Get a Police Report

Always call law enforcement, even for seemingly minor accidents. In Jacksonville, call 911 for accidents involving injuries, or the non-emergency police number for property-damage-only collisions. A police report provides an official, unbiased account of the accident and serves as crucial documentation for insurance claims and potential lawsuits.

When officers arrive, cooperate fully and stick to observable facts. Describe what happened without speculating about what other drivers were thinking or intending. Request the responding officer’s name and report number before leaving the scene.

Some drivers may ask you not to involve police, especially if they are uninsured or worried about citations. Do not agree to this. An official report protects you.

Step 3: Document the Scene

If you are physically able to do so safely, gather as much documentation as possible before leaving the scene. This includes:

  • Photographs of all vehicles involved, showing damage from multiple angles
  • Photos of the overall accident scene, including road conditions, traffic signs, and skid marks
  • Photos of any visible injuries
  • The other driver’s name, contact information, license plate number, driver’s license number, and insurance information
  • Names and contact information for any witnesses

If you are too shaken or injured to gather this information yourself, a passenger, friend, or even a bystander may be able to help gather this information on your behalf.

Step 4: Seek Medical Attention Within 14 Days

This is one of the most critical steps under Florida law, and one of the most frequently overlooked. Under Florida’s PIP law, you must seek medical care within 14 days of the accident to remain eligible for certain insurance benefits. Early treatment not only protects your health, it helps strengthen any future claim.

Many serious injuries, including whiplash, soft tissue damage, and traumatic brain injuries, do not show symptoms immediately. Seeking prompt medical attention accomplishes two critical goals: it allows a doctor to identify and begin treating injuries before they worsen, and it creates a medical record that directly links your injuries to the accident, which is essential for both your PIP claim and any potential personal injury lawsuit.

Do not wait to see how you feel. Get evaluated promptly.

Step 5: Notify Your Insurance Company

You must report the accident to your insurer as soon as possible, ideally within 24 hours. Provide basic details only, including where and when it happened, the number of vehicles involved, and any injuries reported.

Avoid admitting fault, even apologizing, as these statements can be used against you later. Your insurer may request a recorded statement. It is generally advisable to speak with an attorney before giving one, as recorded statements can be taken out of context and used to minimize your claim.

Step 6: Protect Your Claim in the Days That Follow

The days immediately following the accident are just as important as your actions at the scene. A few key steps:

  • Keep detailed records. Save all medical bills, receipts, and documentation related to the accident and your injuries.
  • Follow your treatment plan. Missed appointments or gaps in care give insurance companies grounds to argue that your injuries were not as serious as claimed.
  • Keep a personal journal. Write daily notes about your pain levels, limitations, and how the injury is affecting your daily life. This documentation can be valuable in a pain and suffering claim.
  • Do not post on social media. Insurance adjusters routinely monitor claimants’ social media accounts, looking for content that can be used to undermine injury claims.

Step 7: Be Careful With the Other Driver’s Insurance Company

Insurance adjusters in Jacksonville are often experienced with Florida’s no-fault laws and may be quick to downplay injuries or shift blame. Some may attempt to settle quickly to close cases before the full extent of injuries is known. You are not required to give a statement to the other driver’s insurance company, and you are not required to accept their first offer.

Early settlement offers frequently fail to account for future medical expenses, long-term impacts on your ability to work, and non-economic damages like pain and suffering. Once you accept a settlement and sign a release, you generally cannot go back for more.

Step 8: Consult a Jacksonville Car Accident Attorney

An attorney can review the details of the accident, explain how Florida law applies to your situation, and help you understand your options before dealing extensively with insurance companies. Early guidance can help prevent common mistakes, such as giving recorded statements too soon or accepting settlements before the full extent of injuries is known.

Most Jacksonville personal injury attorneys handle car accident cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing unless compensation is recovered. There is no cost to getting an early consultation, and the information you receive can protect you from costly mistakes.

The personal injury team at Harris Guidi Rosner, P.A., serves Jacksonville and communities throughout Northeast Florida. If you have been injured in a car accident, we are here to help you navigate every step of the process and fight for the full compensation you deserve.

Contact Harris Guidi Rosner for a free consultation today »

Peter Shutters

Peter Shutters has fourteen years as an insurance defense attorney before joining Harris, Guidi & Rosner P.A. where he concentrates on Personal Injury cases. He has jury trial experience in a variety of Florida Counties, including, Duval, Clay, Marion, Orange, Escambia, Santa Rosa and Okaloosa. He has handled a number of appeals, including several oral arguments at the Fifth DCA in Volusia County.