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I Got Rear-Ended and My Back Hurts. What Now?

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I Got Rear-Ended and My Back Hurts. What Now?

July 1, 2026Michelle Lysengen
A person sitting on the edge of a bed holding their lower back in pain, representing delayed back pain symptoms commonly experienced after a rear-end car accident.

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    Every 4 minutes.

    On average, every 4 minutes someone picks up the phone and calls us for help. That kind of trust says everything.

    Your car has a scratch, maybe not even that. You feel mostly fine standing in the road exchanging insurance info. Then you wake up the next morning and your lower back has locked up, or there’s a deep ache between your shoulder blades that wasn’t there yesterday.

    Two questions are probably running at the same time. Is this serious? And if my car is barely dented, do I even have a claim worth anything?

    Both are fair. Here are real answers to both.

    Key Takeaways

    • Back and neck pain that shows up hours or days after a rear-end crash is normal, not a sign you are imagining it. Adrenaline masks pain at the scene while inflammation builds over the next day or two.
    • In California, the driver who rear-ends you is presumed at fault, but that presumption can be challenged, so fault is rarely the real fight in these cases.
    • There is no rule in California that says a low-damage crash equals a low injury. Insurers argue it constantly. The science does not back them up.
    • A clean-looking bumper can actually transfer more force to your body, not less, because the car absorbs less of the impact.
    • The value of a back-injury claim depends on the severity of the injury, how well it is documented, your lost income, and your pain, not on any “average settlement” number you read online.

    First: is this pain something to worry about?

    Probably worth getting checked, even if it feels manageable. Here is why the timing throws people off.

    At the moment of impact, your body floods with adrenaline and endorphins. They are doing their job, dulling pain so you can function, deal with the other driver, get off the road. That same chemistry is why people walk away from crashes saying they feel fine and then can barely get out of bed the next morning. The injury was there the whole time. You just couldn’t feel it yet.

    What’s actually happening underneath is inflammation. Soft tissue that got stretched or torn in the crash starts to swell over the following hours, and muscles around the injury tighten up to protect it. That process takes time to develop, which is why neck and back pain after a rear-end collision frequently doesn’t peak until a day or two later. Feeling okay at the scene tells you very little about whether you were hurt.

    The injuries themselves are usually soft-tissue. The classic one is whiplash, the rapid back-and-forth whipping of the neck, but the same force travels down the spine, which is why so much of the pain lands in the mid and lower back rather than just the neck. Most people who report whiplash symptoms also report mid-back pain. Sprains and strains are the most common result and the hardest to see, because they don’t show up on a basic X-ray the way a fracture would.

    Important

    When to skip the urgent care and go straight to an ER: sharp or shooting pain, numbness or tingling running down your arms or legs, weakness in a limb, or loss of bladder or bowel control. Those can signal nerve or spinal-cord involvement and need to be seen immediately.

    For everything short of that, get evaluated soon anyway. A doctor’s record made close to the crash does two things at once: it gets you treated, and it ties the injury to the collision while the connection is clear. We’ll come back to why that second part matters more than people expect.

    This is general information, not medical advice. A doctor who examines you is the only one who can tell you what’s actually going on with your back.

    The real question: do I have a case if my car is fine?

    Start with fault, because that part is mostly in your favor. In California, the driver who hits you from behind is presumed to be the negligent one. The rule comes from Vehicle Code section 21703, which says a driver can’t follow another car more closely than is reasonable and prudent for the speed and the conditions. Break a safety statute like that and cause the exact harm it was written to prevent, and California law treats you as presumed negligent without the injured person having to prove it from scratch.

    That presumption is strong, but it isn’t automatic. It can be rebutted. A California appeals court spelled this out decades ago: whether the rear driver was actually negligent is a question of fact, not an automatic rule. The lead driver can end up partly or fully at fault for things like cutting in with no room to stop, slamming the brakes for no reason, or driving with broken brake lights, and in a multi-car pileup fault often gets split several ways. So it’s a strong starting position, not a guarantee.

    What that means in practice: in a straightforward rear-ender, fault is rarely the fight. The fight is over how badly you were hurt. And that’s exactly the ground the insurance company wants to move the argument onto.

    “Your car barely has a scratch, so you can’t be hurt”

    You will hear some version of this. It is the single most common move an insurer makes against a back-injury claim from a rear-end crash. Minimal damage to the car, the argument goes, means minimal force, which means you can’t really be injured. The industry even has a name for these files. They get sorted as minor-impact soft-tissue claims and handled with a playbook built to pay them as little as possible.

    Two problems with the argument.

    The first is legal. There is no rule in California that ties the amount of vehicle damage to the severity of an injury. None. A jury is not instructed to compare your bumper to your back. The “low damage, low injury” line is a negotiating tactic dressed up as a law of physics, and it has no actual legal force.

    The second problem is the physics itself, which runs the opposite direction from what the insurer claims.

    Important

    A car that doesn’t crumple can transfer more force to your body, not less. When a bumper crushes, it absorbs energy. When it doesn’t, that energy has to go somewhere, and a good deal of it passes through the frame and into the people inside.

    Modern bumpers are engineered specifically to resist visible damage in low-speed impacts. That’s a feature, sold as keeping repair costs down. But it means the crash energy that would have gone into crumpling metal instead gets transmitted to the occupants. The number that actually predicts injury is the change in velocity your body experiences and how your spine moves through the impact, not how the bumper looks afterward.

    The research backs this up. In a study where real people were exposed to controlled low-speed rear impacts, close to a third developed neck and back symptoms at a speed change of about 4 km/h, roughly the pace of a brisk walk. Crash-reconstruction work on actual collisions found no meaningful link between the property damage and how the occupants recovered, and a large population study reached the same conclusion: injury outcomes didn’t track with the cost of the vehicle damage.

    To be straight about it: this doesn’t mean every low-speed tap causes a serious injury, and a careful defense expert will point out that the worst structural injuries usually need more force. That’s true. But it’s a long way from there to “no damage means no injury,” which is what gets argued, and which the evidence simply doesn’t support.

    Why the gap before your pain started matters

    Remember the delayed pain from earlier? The insurer has a plan for that too.

    If there’s a gap between the crash and your first doctor visit, or your treatment, they will use it to argue the injury came from something else, or wasn’t serious enough to bother with. The same biology that makes delayed pain normal becomes a talking point against you the moment you let the gap grow.

    California law sets the bar you actually have to clear, and it’s reasonable. Your crash has to be a substantial factor in causing the injury, meaning more than a trivial one. It does not have to be the only cause. And a recent change in California evidence law cuts in your favor here: a defense expert who wants to claim your pain is really just old wear-and-tear now has to meet the same standard of medical probability you do. They can’t just float “well, it could have been pre-existing” as a possibility anymore.

    Speaking of pre-existing. If you had a bad back before the crash and the collision made it worse, that is still a claim. Under California’s eggshell rule, the driver who hit you takes you as you are. Aggravating an old injury counts. The fact that your spine wasn’t pristine before someone rear-ended you does not get them off the hook.

    The practical takeaway from all of this is dull, but it’s the whole ballgame: see a doctor, follow the treatment plan, don’t leave gaps. The medical record is what answers every one of these arguments before the insurer can finish making it.

    So what is a back-injury claim actually worth?

    Anyone quoting you a specific number this early is guessing, and the “average back-injury settlement is X” figures floating around online aren’t anchored to anything real. California law doesn’t work off averages. It compensates the actual detriment you suffered, which is different for every person.

    What genuinely moves the number:

    • How serious the injury is, and whether it’s permanent. A strain that resolves in six weeks and a disc injury that needs ongoing care are not in the same universe.
    • How well it’s documented. Consistent medical records connecting the injury to the crash are the foundation. Gaps and missed appointments weaken it.
    • What you lost in income. Wages while you were out, plus reduced earning capacity if the injury affects your ability to work going forward.
    • Pain and suffering. California lets you recover for the non-economic side: the pain, the disruption, the things you can’t do anymore. It’s real, and it’s part of the claim.

    None of that produces a tidy number on day one. It comes from the facts of your specific injury, which is exactly why the documentation matters so much.

    The bottom line

    If you were rear-ended and your back hurts, two things are likely true at once: the pain is real even if it showed up late, and you may have a stronger claim than the condition of your car suggests. The insurer’s whole strategy is to convince you otherwise, that you’re fine, that a small dent means a small injury, that the gap before your pain started means it wasn’t the crash. None of those hold up the way they want you to believe.

    The single most useful thing you can do is get medical care promptly and stick with it. After that, if an adjuster is leaning on the “minor impact” line or pushing a fast, low offer, talking to a personal injury attorney costs you nothing to find out where you actually stand. In California, you generally have two years from the crash to act, but the medical record you build starts mattering immediately.

    About the Author

    Michelle Lysengen

    Michelle is a content specialist at DK Law and creates content that highlights company events and breaks down complex legal topics into digestible, engaging content. She earned her B.A. in Marketing from California State University, Fullerton.

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