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Can Social Media Hurt Your Long Beach Injury Claim?

May 14, 2026 by Michael Waks

Can Social Media Hurt Your Long Beach Injury Claim?

You’ve just been in a car accident in Long Beach. You’re shaken, maybe hurt, and the first instinct for many people is to reach for their phone, not to call a lawyer, but to post about what just happened. It feels natural. Social media is how we process and share our lives.

But here is what the insurance company is hoping you’ll do: keep posting.

Posting on social media after a car accident is one of the most common and most damaging mistakes injury victims make. Insurance adjusters and defense attorneys routinely monitor claimants’ social media profiles, and a single photo, comment, or check-in can be used to undermine your credibility, contradict your injuries, and drastically reduce your compensation.

Do Insurance Companies Really Monitor Social Media?

Yes, and more aggressively than most people realize. Insurance companies and defense law firms routinely assign investigators or use specialized software to monitor the social media activity of personal injury claimants. This is entirely legal, and anything you post publicly can be collected and used as evidence against you.

What they are looking for includes:

  • Photos or videos that appear to contradict the severity of your injuries
  • Posts or comments that suggest you were at fault for the accident
  • Check-ins at locations inconsistent with your claimed limitations
  • Statements about your physical condition that differ from what you told your doctor
  • Evidence of activities you claimed you could no longer perform

Even posts that seem completely harmless, a birthday dinner photo, a walk on the beach, a smiling selfie, can be presented out of context to suggest you are not as injured as you claim. Insurance companies are skilled at this, and it works.

How Posting on Social Media After a Car Accident Can Damage Your Claim

Here are real-world ways that social media posts have derailed personal injury claims in California:

Photos That Contradict Your Injuries

Imagine claiming a serious back injury from a Long Beach car accident, then posting a photo of yourself at a friend’s backyard barbecue, standing and smiling. Even if you were in significant pain that day and pushed through it to attend, the insurance company will present that photo to argue you fabricated or exaggerated your injuries. Context rarely survives litigation.

Comments That Imply Fault

A post saying “I can’t believe I ran that red light” or “I should have been paying more attention,” even made in a moment of shock or guilt, can be used by the defense to establish comparative negligence and reduce your compensation. Under California’s comparative fault system, any percentage of fault attributed to you reduces your award by that amount.

Check-Ins and Location Data

Checking in at a gym, a sports event, or an amusement park while claiming you cannot work or perform daily activities due to your injuries is a serious problem. Location-based posts can be timestamped and cross-referenced against your medical records and deposition testimony.

Discussing the Accident or Your Case

Posting details about the accident, your legal case, or your settlement negotiations, even in a private message that gets shared, can compromise your case strategy, reveal information that benefits the opposing party, and potentially violate attorney-client confidentiality.

Posts by Friends and Family

It’s not just your own posts that matter. If a friend tags you in a photo at a concert or a family member posts about your vacation while you’re claiming debilitating injuries, that content can be just as damaging. Defense investigators also search for tagged content.

What You Should Never Post on Social Media After a Car Accident

To protect your Long Beach injury claim, avoid posting the following at all costs:

  • Any details about the accident: Where it happened, how it happened, who was involved, or what you think caused it
  • Photos or videos of yourself: Especially any that show you being physically active, socializing, or appearing well
  • Comments about your injuries: Statements like “I’m feeling much better” or “it was just a fender bender” can be taken out of context
  • Anything about your legal case: Settlement amounts, attorney discussions, insurance negotiations, or court dates
  • Check-ins or location tags: Anywhere that contradicts your claimed physical limitations
  • Complaints about the other driver: Publicly attacking the at-fault party can come back to haunt you and affect how the jury perceives you
  • Anything about your finances or employment: Posts about work activities can complicate lost wage claims

Is Setting Your Profile to Private Enough?

Many injury victims think switching their social media profiles to private after an accident will solve the problem. It helps but it is not a complete solution. Here’s why:

  • Courts can order disclosure. In California, defense attorneys can subpoena your social media records as part of the discovery process. Courts have increasingly allowed access to private social media content when it is deemed relevant to the case.
  • Screenshots spread. Friends, acquaintances, or even strangers can screenshot and share your private posts. Once it’s out, you cannot un-share it.
  • Metadata survives. Even deleted posts can leave behind metadata that may be recoverable. Deleting posts after an accident, especially after litigation begins, can also be considered spoliation of evidence, which carries serious legal consequences.

The safest approach: do not post anything at all related to your accident, injuries, or daily activities for the duration of your claim.

What California Law Says About Social Media as Evidence

California courts have consistently held that publicly available social media content is admissible as evidence in personal injury cases. Under the California Code of Civil Procedure § 2017.010, any information that is not privileged and is relevant to the subject matter of the lawsuit is discoverable, including social media content.

California courts have also addressed private social media content. While plaintiffs retain some privacy rights, courts have allowed defendants to access private posts when there is a reasonable belief they contain evidence relevant to the claims at hand. In practice, this means your private social media is not as protected as you might think once litigation begins.

Additionally, the California Rules of Court govern how electronic evidence, including social media records, must be handled and preserved during litigation. Destroying or altering relevant evidence after a lawsuit is filed can result in sanctions, adverse jury instructions, or even case dismissal.

What You Should Do Instead of Posting on Social Media

Rather than turning to social media after a car accident, here is where your energy is better spent:

  1. Seek medical attention immediately. Your health comes first, and consistent medical treatment creates the documented record your attorney needs to prove your injuries.
  2. Keep a private injury journal. Instead of posting, write daily notes in a private document about your pain levels, symptoms, limitations, and how your injuries are affecting your daily life. This journal can be a powerful tool for your attorney.
  3. Document your recovery privately. Save photos of visible injuries, bruises, or medical equipment, but keep them off social media and share them only with your attorney.
  4. Talk to family and close friends in person. Share your experience through private conversations rather than public posts.
  5. Ask friends and family not to post about you. Let your close circle know not to tag you, post photos of you, or share anything about your accident or recovery.
  6. Contact a Long Beach personal injury attorney. The sooner you have legal representation, the sooner you have someone guiding you on exactly what to say, do, and, critically, not post.

Frequently Asked Questions About Social Media and Injury Claims in California

Q: Can I delete my social media posts after a car accident?

A: You can delete posts before litigation begins, but once you reasonably anticipate a lawsuit or one has been filed, deleting evidence can be considered spoliation and may result in serious legal penalties, including sanctions or an adverse jury instruction. Speak with your attorney before deleting anything.

Q: What if my post was taken out of context?

A: Context is difficult to restore once a post is in front of an insurance adjuster or jury. Even if you have a perfectly reasonable explanation, being forced to explain a post weakens your credibility and distracts from the merits of your case. The only way to prevent this is to avoid posting in the first place.

Q: Can the insurance company access my private messages?

A: Generally, private direct messages require a court order or subpoena to access. However, screenshots of private messages can be shared by the recipient, and courts have allowed the discovery of private messages in some personal injury cases. Treat all digital communication as potentially discoverable.

Q: Is it safe to post after my case settles?

A: Once your case is fully resolved and you’ve signed a settlement agreement, the active risk to your claim is over. However, some settlement agreements include confidentiality clauses that restrict what you can say publicly about the case. Always review your settlement terms with your attorney before posting anything about the outcome.

Q: What if I already posted something after my accident?

A: Do not panic, and do not delete anything without first consulting your attorney. Your attorney needs to know what was posted so they can assess the potential impact and develop a strategy to address it. Acting quickly and transparently with your lawyer is the best path forward.

Q: Does this apply to all social platforms?

A: Yes, Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, X (formerly Twitter), Snapchat, YouTube, LinkedIn, and other social media platforms are all fair game. Investigators monitor all major platforms. Snapchat’s “disappearing” content is not as safe as it seems; screenshots can be taken before posts vanish.

How a Long Beach Personal Injury Attorney Can Protect Your Claim

Having an experienced personal injury attorney in your corner from the start is the most effective way to safeguard your claim on social media and everywhere else. Attorney Michael Waks and his team will:

  • Advise you specifically on what to avoid posting throughout your case
  • Review any existing social media content for potential risk before the defense finds it
  • Handle all communication with insurance companies so you never have to guess what to say
  • Build a strong, documented case that withstands scrutiny, including any attempts to use social media against you
  • Fight for maximum compensation for your medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and more

Protect Your Long Beach Injury Claim: Contact Michael Waks Today

If you’ve been injured in a car accident in Long Beach or anywhere in Southern California, every decision you make in the days that follow, including what you post online, can affect the outcome of your case. Don’t leave your compensation to chance. Call the Law Offices of Michael Waks today for a free, confidential consultation. There is no fee unless we win your case. The sooner you have an attorney on your side, the better protected your claim will be.

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Michael Waks
Michael Waks
Michael Waks is an aggressive advocate for people who have suffered because of someone else’s actions. Michael decided to become a personal injury lawyer when, while clerking at a legal defense firm during law school, he witnessed and was infuriated by asbestos manufacturers spending millions to avoid taking responsibility for the egregious injuries they caused. Immediately after passing the bar, Michael opened his own firm in Long Beach, CA to help the victims of personal injury accidents get every benefit owed them under the law.
Michael Waks
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