Estimated Read Time: 5 Minutes
After a car accident, most people focus on the immediate aftermath: exchanging insurance, filing a police report, calling family. What often goes unexamined is the body itself. Some of the most serious car accident injuries don’t cause pain at the scene. They show up hours or days later, after adrenaline wears off and the real damage becomes clear.
Understanding the most common car accident injuries and how they behave in the time after a crash can be the difference between a full recovery and a claim that falls apart before it starts.
Here’s what this article covers:
- The six most common car accident injuries and what they do to the body.
- Why some of the most serious injuries don’t cause pain right away.
- Which injuries tend to result in the largest legal claims.
- The steps that protect both your health and your rights after a crash.
- When it’s time to speak with a New York personal injury attorney.
The 6 Most Common Car Accident Injuries
According to the National Safety Council, motor vehicle crashes resulted in 4.9 million medically consulted injuries in 2024 alone, and total injury costs reached $559.3 billion. The injuries below account for the overwhelming majority of those cases.
| Injury Type | How It Happens | Symptoms to Watch For |
| Whiplash and neck strain | Rapid forward-backward head movement, most common in rear-end crashes | Neck stiffness, headaches, dizziness; often delayed 24 to 48 hours |
| Traumatic Brain Injury / Concussion | Head strikes a surface or brain jolts inside the skull | Headache, confusion, memory gaps, light sensitivity |
| Back and spinal injuries | Compression and twisting forces along the spine | Lower back pain, numbness or tingling in limbs |
| Broken bones and fractures | Blunt impact with steering wheel, door, dashboard, or airbag | Localized pain, swelling, limited mobility |
| Internal injuries | Blunt force to the torso or seatbelt compression | Abdominal pain, dizziness, symptoms that worsen over hours |
| Psychological injuries | Trauma from the crash and its aftermath | Anxiety, nightmares, avoidance of driving, depression |
Whiplash and Soft Tissue Neck Injuries
Whiplash is the most commonly reported car accident injury. According to the Mayo Clinic, it occurs when the head snaps forcefully backward and then forward, overstretching the neck’s muscles, tendons, and ligaments. Rear-end collisions are the most common cause.
Symptoms include:
- Neck pain and stiffness
- Headaches at the base of the skull
- Dizziness
- Tingling in the arms
- Fatigue
One important fact: symptoms most often start within days of the injury, not immediately. Many people leave the scene without any neck pain and wake up unable to turn their head the next morning. Whiplash ranges from mild to severely disabling. Cases involving nerve damage or structural cervical spine injury may require months or years of treatment.
Traumatic Brain Injuries and Concussions
The CDC identifies motor vehicle crashes as one of the leading causes of traumatic brain injury (TBI) in the United States. A TBI can occur when the head strikes a hard surface, a steering wheel, window, or deployed airbag, or when the brain moves violently inside the skull from the force of a sudden stop, even without any head contact at all.
Symptoms include:
- Headaches
- Confusion
- Memory gaps
- Nausea
- Sensitivity to light or sound
Mild TBIs, including concussions, are frequently underestimated because there is no visible wound. The absence of a visible injury does not mean the brain was unaffected. Untreated concussions can lead to lasting cognitive and neurological problems.
Back and Spinal Cord Injuries
The violent forces involved in a crash place extreme stress on the spine. Herniated discs, fractured vertebrae, and torn ligaments are all common outcomes.
Symptoms include:
- Back pain
- Stiffness
- Radiating pain into the legs
- Numbness
- Loss of sensation/movement in severe cases
- Partial or complete loss of sensation or movement (in the most severe cases involving spinal cord damage)
Back injuries are among the most contested in personal injury claims because they rely heavily on imaging rather than visible signs, and insurance companies routinely seek to minimize their severity. Thorough medical documentation from the start is critical.
Broken Bones and Fractures
Broken bones are a predictable result of crash physics. Hands, wrists, and arms frequently fracture from bracing against the steering wheel at impact. Ribs can fracture from airbag deployment or the force of a seatbelt. Leg injuries, including femur and knee fractures, are common in front-end and T-bone collisions.
Symptoms include:
- Immediate pain at the injury site
- Swelling
- Bruising
- Limited range of motion
- Inability to bear weight
- Delayed symptoms in stress fractures, which may not appear on imaging for several days
Internal Injuries
Internal injuries are among the most dangerous car accident injuries because they can be completely invisible at first. Blunt force to the torso can damage the liver, spleen, or kidneys, or cause internal bleeding. Seatbelt syndrome, injuries caused by compression of the seatbelt during impact, can bruise or lacerate abdominal organs.
Symptoms include:
- Abdominal pain
- Dizziness
- Increasing fatigue
Symptoms may not appear for hours, making prompt medical evaluation critical after any significant crash regardless of how you feel.
Psychological Injuries
Post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression frequently follow serious accidents. The experience of a violent crash, and the pain, financial stress, and loss of mobility that follow, can cause lasting psychological harm.
Symptoms include:
- Flashbacks or intrusive memories
Sleep disturbances
- Persistent anxiety or fear
- Mood changes or difficulty concentrating
Under New York law, psychological injuries are compensable as part of pain and suffering damages, and they deserve the same documentation and medical attention as physical injuries.
Why So Many Car Accident Injuries Have Delayed Symptoms
One of the most important things to understand after any crash is that adrenaline and endorphins released during trauma can mask pain for hours. Many people leave the scene feeling completely fine and only begin experiencing symptoms the next morning, or several days later. This pattern is well-documented in accident medicine and is not a sign that the injury is minor.
The injuries most likely to surface after a delay include:
| Injury | Typical Delay in Symptom Onset |
| Whiplash and neck strain | 24 to 72 hours |
| Concussion symptoms | Hours to several days |
| Herniated disc pain | Days to weeks |
| Internal bleeding | Hours to days |
| PTSD and anxiety | Weeks to months |
This delay also creates a legal problem. Insurance companies routinely exploit a gap in medical treatment to argue that an injury was not caused by the accident. If you wait days or weeks to see a doctor, that gap becomes a weapon against your claim.
Seeking medical attention right after an accident, even if you feel fine, creates the documentation that protects both your health and your case.
What to Do After a Car Accident in New York
The steps you take in the hours and days after a crash directly affect your recovery and your ability to pursue compensation.
New York’s statute of limitations usually gives personal injury victims three years from the date of the accident to file a claim, but the evidence-building process should start immediately. [always put limiting language when discussing SOL. Remember it is 90 days if it is a car accident with an NYPD car or FDNY ambulance etc.]
- Call 911 and file a police report, even if the accident seems minor
- Seek medical attention right away, before any symptoms appear
- Photograph the scene, vehicle damage, and any visible injuries
- Collect the other driver’s insurance information, license plate, and contact details
- Do not give a recorded statement to any insurance company before speaking with an attorney
- Keep a record of all medical visits, prescriptions, and the daily impact of your injuries
- Contact a personal injury attorney as soon as possible
Hurt in a New York Car Accident? Talk to Eric Richman.
The injuries above frequently result in significant medical bills, lost income, and lasting changes to your life. Insurance companies move fast after an accident to limit what they pay out. You should move just as fast to protect yourself.
Eric Richman, Esq. has spent over 20 years fighting for car accident victims across New York.
He has secured millions of dollars for his clients and is readily available to discuss the details of your individual case. Contact us online or call (212) 688-3965 or toll-free at (800) 801-9655.
