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Hurt Advice Launches Case-Routing Intake Program for Accident Victims

Hurt Advice launched a case-routing intake program to help California accident victims organize key facts before possible review by an independent participating attorney or law firm. Hurt Advice is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.

Published

March 24, 2026

Updated

March 24, 2026

Reviewed

March 24, 2026

Reading time

2 min read

Jurisdiction

California

Quick answer

Hurt Advice offers case-routing intake support for California accident victims. Hurt Advice is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice.

Key takeaways

  • Accident facts
  • Injury and treatment details
  • Insurance information
  • Urgency and deadline flags
Raffi Naljian

Written by

Raffi Naljian, Esq.

California Personal Injury, Litigation & Criminal Defense Attorney

20+ Years Experience

Raffi Naljian

Reviewed by

Raffi Naljian, Esq.

California Personal Injury, Litigation & Criminal Defense Attorney

20+ Years Experience

Why trust this article

Raffi Naljian reviewed this Hurt Advice publication update for accuracy, clarity, and next-step usefulness for injured Californians.

Before you rely on this guide

This article is written for people dealing with injury-law questions in California. It is meant to help you understand the issue, not replace legal advice about your specific case.

What to do after this article

Start with the quick answer, skim the table of contents, and then use the links below to move into the practice area, author archive, or resource page that turns general guidance into a clearer next step for your situation.

What the Intake Program Organizes

The intake program helps organize accident facts, injury details, treatment status, insurance information, and urgency signals. A case-specific legal evaluation must come from an attorney or law firm after separate review.
  • Accident facts
  • Injury and treatment details
  • Insurance information
  • Urgency and deadline flags
  • Possible next-step routing
  • No attorney-client relationship from submission

How the Program Works

Starting intake is simple. Contact Hurt Advice by phone or through the website, share the basic facts, and the information may be routed to an independent participating attorney or law firm for review.
  • Call or submit online form
  • Share key accident facts
  • Upload or summarize records where available
  • Possible same-day routing
  • Weekend and evening intake availability

Fee Terms Are Attorney-Specific

Participating attorneys or law firms may offer contingency-fee arrangements, but Hurt Advice does not set attorney fees. The written fee agreement with the attorney or law firm controls fees, costs, and expenses.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Hurt Advice intake request free?
There is no charge to submit a case-routing intake request through Hurt Advice. Any attorney fee terms must be addressed separately with an attorney or law firm.
What should I provide with an intake request?
If available, provide accident date, location, police reports, medical records, photos, insurance correspondence, and urgent deadlines.
Will I be pressured to hire Hurt Advice?
No. Hurt Advice is not a law firm and cannot be hired to represent you. Any representation must come from a separate written agreement with an attorney or law firm.

Sources and references

This article does not currently list external source citations. It reflects first-party editorial judgment and attorney review where noted above. Contact Hurt Advice if you need guidance on how this applies to your specific case.

Need help after an accident?

Hurt Advice intake team can review your situation, explain your options, and help you move forward with a plan that fits your case.