Key Takeaways
| Right | What You Should Know |
|---|---|
| Replacement vehicle | You are entitled to a like-for-like hire car during repairs if the accident was not your fault |
| Personal injury | Injuries sustained in a road accident entitle you to compensation act within three years |
| Credit hire disputes | Insurers increasingly challenge hire rates instructing a solicitor early protects your position |
| Uninsured drivers | If the other driver is uninsured, the Motor Insurers’ Bureau can still compensate you |
| Time limits | Three years from the date of the accident to bring a personal injury claim |
Road traffic accident claims in the UK are rising in complexity. A growing number of insurers dispute the cost of credit hire vehicles provided to accident victims, and those without legal representation often find their legitimate claims reduced or rejected entirely. Wolf Law represents accident victims across Great Britain and ensures that you receive every penny of compensation you are owed.
Your Right to a Hire Vehicle
If a road accident was not your fault, you have a legal right to a replacement vehicle while your car is being repaired or assessed for total loss. This is known as a credit hire arrangement. Under this model, a hire company provides you with a vehicle now and recovers the cost from the at-fault driver’s insurer later.
Insurers have become increasingly aggressive in challenging credit hire rates, arguing that the vehicles provided are above the basic rate available to you. Courts have developed a body of case law addressing these disputes, and the outcome often depends on whether you can demonstrate impecuniosity an inability to fund hire yourself or, alternatively, that the rate charged was reasonable in the circumstances.
If the other insurer is disputing your hire charges, contact Wolf Law immediately. Acting early gives us the best chance of preserving your full entitlement.
Claiming Compensation for Injury
Where you have suffered a personal injury in a road accident, you are entitled to compensation for your pain, suffering, and any financial losses that flow from it. This includes loss of earnings, medical expenses, and the cost of any adaptations required at home during your recovery.
Whiplash injuries, soft tissue damage, and psychological trauma following a collision are all compensable. The Whiplash Reform Programme, introduced in 2021, changed the way lower-value whiplash claims are handled, but claims involving more serious injuries, or those where symptoms persist beyond the standard tariff period, continue to be assessed on their full merits.
Wolf Law’s accident claims solicitors act for injured clients on a no-win no-fee basis in the majority of cases, meaning you face no financial risk in bringing a claim.
Dealing With the Other Driver’s Insurer
You are not obliged to accept the first offer made by the at-fault driver’s insurer. Early offers are frequently below the true value of your claim. Insurers are sophisticated negotiators and claimants without legal advice regularly accept settlements that significantly undervalue their injuries.
Once you instruct Wolf Law, all communications from the insurer go through us. We assess the value of your claim based on medical evidence and ensure that any settlement reflects your full losses, both current and future. We do not advise you to settle until we are satisfied that the offer is fair.
For more on your rights after a road accident, visit our personal injury pages. If you need immediate advice, speak to one of our solicitors now.
What to Do After a Road Accident
The steps you take in the immediate aftermath of an accident have a direct bearing on the strength of your claim. Gather contact and insurance details from the other driver. Take photographs of the vehicles, the road conditions, and any visible injuries. Obtain witness contact details. Report the accident to your own insurer, even if you do not intend to claim through them. Seek medical attention promptly, even if you feel only minor discomfort initially.
Do not admit liability at the scene. Do not sign any document produced by the other driver’s insurer without legal advice. Contact Wolf Law as soon as practicable so that your claim can be assessed and protected from the earliest possible stage.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to make a road accident claim?
You have three years from the date of the accident to bring a personal injury claim. For children, the three-year period runs from their 18th birthday. Do not leave it to the last moment evidence deteriorates and witnesses become harder to trace over time.
What if the other driver was uninsured?
You can still claim compensation through the Motor Insurers’ Bureau (MIB), which exists precisely to compensate victims of uninsured and untraced drivers. Wolf Law has experience dealing with MIB claims and can guide you through the process.
Can I claim for psychological injuries as well as physical ones?
Yes. Anxiety, post-traumatic stress, and travel phobia following a road accident are all recognised injuries that attract compensation. Medical evidence from a qualified psychiatrist or psychologist will be required to support the claim.
Will I have to go to court?
The majority of personal injury claims settle out of court. Court proceedings may be issued to progress a claim or where liability is disputed, but most cases resolve before a final hearing. Wolf Law will advise you at every stage.
What does no-win no-fee mean?
A no-win no-fee agreement means that if your claim is unsuccessful, you pay us nothing. If it succeeds, our fee is deducted from your compensation. We will explain the precise terms before you agree to instruct us.
Legal Disclaimer: This article is for general information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. If you require advice on your particular situation, please contact Wolf Law directly.





