Highway / freeway crash records

Organize highway accident records before requesting a free accident review.

Highway, interstate, freeway, and turnpike crashes often involve fast-moving traffic, lane changes, exits, mile markers, shoulder stops, tow records, medical visits, and missed-work details. Use this checklist to organize facts without assuming fault, coverage, injury severity, or value.

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Five-step highway crash organizer

  1. Start with neutral location facts. Note the highway name, direction of travel, exit, mile marker, lane/shoulder position, time, weather, lighting, construction, and traffic conditions if known.
  2. Group photos, reports, and witness materials. Keep scene photos, vehicle photos, exchange forms, report details, witness names, passenger details, and dashcam possibilities together.
  3. Separate insurance and vehicle paperwork. Save claim numbers, adjuster letters, tow/storage invoices, repair estimates, rental/transportation receipts, and total-loss paperwork in one folder.
  4. Organize injury and expense records. Keep treatment dates, discharge instructions, imaging, prescriptions, medical bills/EOBs, out-of-pocket receipts, work notes, and missed-work records separate from vehicle paperwork.
  5. Avoid proof/value language. Do not write that a highway location, lane note, photo, report, tow record, repair record, medical record, or bill proves fault, coverage, injury severity, qualification, reimbursement eligibility, claim value, or a guaranteed result.

Multi-vehicle / pileup records

Organize vehicle positions, driver/insurance details, police reports, photos, treatment paperwork, bills/EOBs, and missed-work notes after a multi-car crash.

Open pileup guide →

Dashcam and video evidence

Keep dashcam clips, nearby camera sources, crash photos, reports, witness notes, treatment records, tow/repair documents, and claim paperwork together.

Open video guide →

Rear-end accident records

Organize vehicle photos, report details, insurance paperwork, repair/tow/rental records, treatment records, bills, receipts, and missed-work notes.

Open rear-end guide →

Avoid these assumptions

  • Do not assume highway speed, lane position, a crash report, photos, tow records, repair records, or medical records prove fault, coverage, injury severity, qualification, reimbursement eligibility, claim value, or guaranteed compensation
  • Do not treat this page as legal, medical, insurance, investigative, repair, employment, tax, or financial advice
  • Do not send private medical or claim details to a partner business; use ARC's free-review form instead
  • Do not delay urgent medical, legal, insurance, or financial decisions because of this informational page