What Not to Say to a Personal Injury Lawyer? NOTHING

The answer is genuinely nothing.
That sounds like a trick, and online it usually is. Most articles on this topic give you a list of phrases to avoid, treating the lawyer like a hostile party you have to outsmart. They’ve quietly merged two completely different conversations: the one with the insurance adjuster, who is trying to pay you less, and the one with your own lawyer, who can’t do the job unless they know everything.
The right list of things not to say does exist. It’s just for the other people in your post-accident orbit: the at-fault driver, their adjuster, your own insurance rep, coworkers, social media followers, the friend whose cousin is a paralegal. To everyone on that list, you say very little. To your lawyer, you say everything.
Key Takeaways
Priority
California’s attorney-client privilege protects everything you tell a personal injury lawyer — even at the initial consultation, before you’ve signed anything.
The things people fear saying to a lawyer — prior injuries, embarrassing details, treatment gaps — are exactly the things the lawyer needs to build the case.
The actual “what not to say” rules apply to insurance adjusters, the other driver, social media, and coworkers — not to your own attorney.
California’s pure comparative fault system means a single careless statement to an adjuster can shift fault percentages and cut your recovery proportionally.
→ One sentence to an adjuster can cost you thousands
Disclosing Medi-Cal coverage early is essential. Failure to do so can collapse a settlement at disbursement.
→ Hide a Medi-Cal lien and the whole deal can unravel
Why Your Lawyer Is the One Person Who Needs the Whole Truth
California’s attorney-client privilege is one of the strongest confidentiality protections in American law, and it kicks in at hello. Under Evidence Code § 951, a “client” includes anyone who consults a lawyer for the purpose of retaining them or getting legal advice. The privilege attaches at the first consultation, even if you decide not to hire that lawyer, even if no money changes hands. The ABA’s Model Rule 1.18, which California parallels, says the same: “even when no client-lawyer relationship ensues,” the lawyer can’t use or reveal what you told them.
In practice, anything you say to a personal injury lawyer in a consultation stays between you and that lawyer. Not the insurance company. Not opposing counsel. Not a judge.
Walk into the consultation the way you’d walk into a surgeon’s office: prepared to share the full picture. The old injury nobody knew about. The beer at lunch. The phone in your hand. A lawyer working with the full picture can build a case around the difficult facts. A lawyer who learns about them from opposing counsel three months in cannot.
What Not to Say to Everyone Else (That’s the Real Danger)
The actual “what not to say” rules apply to everyone outside your lawyer’s office, and they get less attention than they deserve.
Insurance adjusters and California’s comparative fault rule
The adjuster who calls you in the first week after an accident is not your friend, however nice they are on the phone. Their job is to close your claim for as little as possible.
California follows pure comparative fault, established by the California Supreme Court in Li v. Yellow Cab Co. in 1975. You can recover damages even if you’re 99% at fault. But your recovery gets reduced by your fault percentage. On a $500,000 case, a 10% shift in fault costs you $50,000.
Adjusters know how this math works, and a recorded statement is where they engineer the fault shift. A throwaway “I guess I should have been watching more carefully” is enough to give them a percentage to argue for. Don’t give recorded statements without your lawyer present. Don’t speculate about what the other driver was doing. Don’t apologize.
Social media and the discovery process
What you post on social media after an accident can affect your claim. In California, posts are discoverable in civil litigation, even if your account is set to private.
California’s discovery statute is intentionally broad: any party can obtain discovery of any non-privileged matter relevant to the case or reasonably calculated to lead to admissible evidence. That includes Facebook timelines, Instagram stories, TikTok videos, Strava activity, and the public side of dating profiles. Privacy settings are not a shield. Courts have repeatedly held that “private” posts can be subpoenaed when the request is properly tailored.
The rules during a pending case: don’t post about the accident, don’t post about your injuries, don’t post about feeling better or worse, don’t post photos of yourself doing physical activity, and don’t delete anything that already exists. Deleting can constitute spoliation of evidence and create a separate legal problem on top of whatever was in the post.
The Things California Victims Hold Back
Three categories of information are withheld most often in California consultations. All three almost always backfire.
Prior injuries and the eggshell plaintiff rule
The most common omission is a prior injury, especially to the same body part affected by the accident. The fear: that disclosing a prior back injury kills the claim because the defense will pin everything on the old condition.
The fear is backward. California’s eggshell plaintiff rule, captured in CACI No. 3927, holds that the defendant takes the plaintiff as they find them. If your back was stable for the past five years and the accident made it unstable, the worsening is fully on the at-fault driver, even though the condition predated the crash. Hiding the prior injury hands the defense a credibility weapon at deposition. Disclosing it early, with medical records to prove the baseline, often increases the value of the aggravation claim.
Gaps in treatment
A three-week gap between physical therapy appointments is the second-most common case-killer. Defense lawyers treat extended gaps as evidence that the injury wasn’t serious, that the plaintiff recovered, or that the symptoms weren’t really there.
The gap usually has a real explanation. Insurance denied a referral. The pain briefly went away and came back. A child got sick, and appointments fell through. Your lawyer needs the actual reason so they can document it before opposing counsel builds a narrative around the empty calendar.
Medi-Cal, Medicare, and other coverage
If you’re on Medi-Cal and don’t tell your lawyer, the settlement can collapse at disbursement. California’s Department of Health Care Services has a statutory right to recover the cost of accident-related care from any third-party settlement under Welfare and Institutions Code § 14124.76.
Significant statutory reductions are available, including an automatic 25% reduction for attorney’s fees and a cap limiting recovery to the portion of the settlement representing past medical expenses. But your lawyer can’t negotiate those reductions if they don’t know the lien exists.
The same applies to Medicare, TRICARE, VA coverage, and employer-sponsored health plans. Tell the lawyer everything that paid for your treatment. They’ll handle the lien side.
What Should You Actually Say to Your Lawyer? Everything.
Show up to the consultation prepared to tell the lawyer everything that happened, in order, including the parts that make you look bad. Bring a written timeline if you have one: when the accident happened, where you went after, who you spoke to, what symptoms appeared when, and what medications you’ve taken. Bring photos. Sign medical records authorizations or bring the records themselves. List every prior injury you can remember, even the ones that seem irrelevant. List every health insurance program you’ve used in the last decade.
The lawyer’s job is to take the full picture and build the strongest version of your case from it. Withholding information doesn’t protect you. It guarantees that whatever you held back will surface at the worst possible moment, with no time left to fix it.
Frequently Asked Questions
How hard is it to win a personal injury lawsuit in California?
Most California PI cases settle before trial; very few go to verdict. The harder question is how high the settlement comes in, which depends almost entirely on documentation, liability clarity, and whether the plaintiff damaged their own case through statements to adjusters or social media posts.
What do insurance companies not want you to know?
That the first offer is almost always low, that recorded statements are used to engineer fault shifts under comparative fault rules, and that anything you post on social media is fair game in discovery. The adjuster’s leverage drops significantly once you’re represented.
What’s a sign of a good settlement offer?
An offer that covers your full medical bills, lost income, and a multiplier for non-economic damages that reflects the severity and permanence of the injury. Any offer that asks you to sign before reviewing your complete medical records should be treated with caution.
Talk to a California Personal Injury Attorney
DK Law represents California personal injury victims across more than a dozen locations statewide. Free consultations are confidential under California’s attorney-client privilege, whether or not you decide to hire us afterward.
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