In North Carolina, you generally don’t have to give a written statement to the at‑fault driver’s insurance company, and your lawyer can decline or delay it. If your own insurer requests a statement, your policy usually requires reasonable cooperation, which your lawyer can manage by proposing a written, attorney‑vetted statement limited to facts. Don’t guess, don’t speculate, and keep an eye on policy deadlines and the lawsuit filing deadline.
You’re asking how to prepare and schedule a written statement for an insurer through your lawyer in North Carolina after a recent accident. The insurer has requested written statements during its investigation, but your attorney hasn’t scheduled it and your treatment is still ongoing. The key decision is whether a statement is required now, who it’s for (your insurer or the other driver’s), and how your lawyer should control timing and content to protect your claim.
Under North Carolina law, your duty to provide a statement depends on which insurer is asking. You typically have no legal duty to give a statement to the at‑fault driver’s insurer. You do usually have a contractual duty to reasonably cooperate with your own insurer (for MedPay, UM, or UIM claims), which can include a written statement. Your lawyer should handle all communications, limit the scope to known facts, and time the statement so it doesn’t lock you into incomplete medical information. Claims are handled with the insurer/adjuster, not the court, but lawsuit filing deadlines still apply if negotiations fail.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because your treatment is ongoing and your lawyer hasn’t scheduled the statement, first determine which insurer is asking. If it’s the at‑fault insurer, your lawyer can decline or postpone and offer a brief factual summary later. If it’s your own insurer (MedPay/UM/UIM), your lawyer should schedule a written, fact‑only statement and update it later as medical records develop, satisfying cooperation without guessing about future care.
In North Carolina, handle insurer statement requests through your lawyer. You typically may decline the at‑fault insurer’s request; you usually must reasonably cooperate with your own insurer. Keep statements written, factual, and narrow, and time them to avoid guessing about ongoing treatment. Next step: ask your lawyer to confirm which insurer is requesting the statement and, if required, schedule a written, attorney‑vetted submission within your policy’s cooperation timeline.
If you're dealing with an insurer’s request for a written statement after a crash, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at [919-341-7055].
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.