Accident expense checklist

Track accident-related out-of-pocket costs before they get scattered.

After a crash, injured drivers often pay for prescriptions, copays, transportation, towing, storage, rental cars, deductibles, and other small expenses from different accounts. This checklist helps organize those records before requesting a free accident review.

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How to make an expense file review-ready

  1. Save every receipt in one folder. Use screenshots, PDFs, email confirmations, photos of paper receipts, and bank or card records when the original receipt is missing.
  2. Label why each cost happened. Note whether the cost was for treatment, medication, transportation, towing, storage, repair, rental, missed work, or another accident-related need.
  3. Match costs to dates. Tie each expense to the crash date, treatment date, repair date, insurance contact, or missed-work period when possible.
  4. Keep insurance and medical records nearby. Pair receipts with EOBs, medical bills, claim numbers, adjuster letters, police report details, repair estimates, and photos.
  5. Do not overstate what receipts prove. Out-of-pocket costs can be important records, but they do not automatically prove fault, injury severity, coverage, qualification, value, or guaranteed compensation.
  6. Use the free-review form when ready. Include the accident basics, injury symptoms, state, ZIP, timing, attorney status, fault details, and a short description of expense categories you have gathered.

Need medical-bill organization?

Keep ambulance, ER, urgent-care, imaging, lab, physician, prescription, follow-up, insurance/EOB, and out-of-pocket records together.

Open ER bill guide →

Need rental or transportation records?

Track rental cars, rideshare/taxi receipts, repair delays, tow/storage paperwork, claim notes, and treatment transportation.

Open transportation guide →

Need missed-work records?

Organize employer notes, pay stubs, absence dates, treatment visits, work restrictions, and transportation costs after a crash.

Open missed-work guide →

Avoid these mistakes

  • Do not delay medical care just to collect paperwork
  • Do not treat this checklist as legal, insurance, repair, financial, tax, or medical advice
  • Do not assume a receipt proves fault, coverage, injury severity, qualification, value, or outcome
  • Do not send sensitive personal records to a partner business instead of using the free-review form