Rear-End Collision Claims in Ireland: Clear Steps, Fair Compensation
Jump to: Section 8 letter · IRB process · Time limits · Compensation bands · FAQs
Best quick answer: In Ireland, rear-end injury claims start with an IRB application after a Section 8 letter within one month; typical awards follow the Personal Injuries Guidelines and straightforward cases can resolve inside a year.
You were rear-ended. Your neck feels stiff. You’re unsure what to do. This guide explains the Irish process in plain words. It covers Section 8 letters, the Injuries Resolution Board (IRB), timelines, and realistic compensation ranges based on the Personal Injuries Guidelines. You’ll also see edge cases that change fault and value.
Early steps matter. See the first-day checklist below. If an uninsured or untraced driver hit you, there’s still a path through the MIBI scheme.
Official sources: IRB claim steps, Personal Injuries Guidelines.
Source at a glance: IRB process · Section 8 (LRC) · Guidelines PDF
Irish law & terminology at a glance
PIAB → IRB: The “Injuries Board/PIAB” is now the Injuries Resolution Board (IRB). You’ll still see older names in search results; they refer to the same statutory body.
Book of Quantum → Personal Injuries Guidelines: Ireland no longer uses the Book of Quantum. Valuations follow the Judicial Council’s Personal Injuries Guidelines (2021, in force 2021–). We use those ranges throughout.
Road Traffic Acts: Fault often connects to offences like careless or dangerous driving (Road Traffic Acts). Garda action is criminal; your claim is civil, but breaches can inform negligence.
TL;DR — rear-end collision claims in Ireland
Send a Section 8 letter within one month. File with the IRB using Form A and medical evidence. The respondent has up to 90 days to consent. Many straightforward cases resolve in under a year; complex injuries or disputes take longer. Compensation follows the Personal Injuries Guidelines, plus your proven expenses. (Guidelines · IRB process)
Your first 24 hours after a rear-end collision
Rear impacts often cause soft tissue injuries. Symptoms can peak days later. Protect your health and your claim record from the start. Keep it simple and tidy.
- Get medical care the same day or as soon as you can.
- Report to Gardaí where required and note the PULSE reference.
- Swap details and photograph vehicles, plates and the scene.
- Tell your insurer as your policy requires, even if not at fault.
- Start a folder for receipts, travel, and missed work hours.
See official guidance from Gardaí.
Who’s at fault in a rear-end crash?
In Ireland, the following driver must keep safe distance. Still, edge cases exist. A malfunctioning brake light can shift fault. An emergency stop to avoid a child may justify sudden braking. In chain reactions, fault can split across several drivers.
Courts look at evidence, not assumptions. Photos, dashcam, damage patterns, and witness accounts carry weight. Early medical records also matter.
Definition: rear-end collision (Ireland)
A rear-end collision happens when a following vehicle strikes the back of a vehicle ahead. Liability depends on safe distance, visibility, speed, and any hazards or defects.
Section 8 notice, now a one-month window
Send a short letter of claim within one month of the accident (source). State what happened, who was involved, and that you intend to claim for injury and loss. Keep proof of posting or delivery. Courts can draw inferences if you delay without good reason.
Law basis: Civil Liability and Courts Act 2004, Section 8 as updated. See the revised Section 8 and the original Act text here.
Download a Section 8 letter template
How the IRB assesses rear-end collision claims
Most Irish injury claims start at the IRB. You submit Form A with a medical report and your receipts. The respondent has up to 90 days to consent to assessment or mediation (source). If they consent, an independent medical exam may follow. The IRB then issues a written assessment. Accept it and payment should follow. Reject it and you can move to court with an Authorisation.
IRB in practice: timelines and paths
The consent window is up to 90 days. If either side declines, an Authorisation allows you to issue proceedings. Severe or unsuitable cases may bypass assessment under Section 17(b). If assessment proceeds, you’ll likely attend an independent medical. The IRB aims to assess within nine months (source), though complex evidence can extend this. Mediation is also available at application stage.
Accepting an IRB award vs proceeding to court
| Path | Upsides | Trade-offs |
|---|---|---|
| Accept IRB award | Order to Pay; faster, lower stress | No chance to argue for a higher figure later |
| Proceed to court | Potentially higher outcome with strong evidence | Longer timeline, more steps, disputed liability/value weighed |
How long do I have to start a claim?
In most Irish personal injury cases, you have two years from the date of knowledge to start legal proceedings (source). Some cases stop or extend the clock (for example, for children). If unsure, ask us early.
Compensation ranges under the Guidelines
General damages follow the Personal Injuries Guidelines. Neck and back soft tissue injuries have bands that scale with recovery time and lasting effect. Special damages cover out-of-pocket losses like earnings, treatment, and travel.
Two people with similar collisions can see different awards. Healing time, work demands, prior conditions, and daily life impact all count. Keep steady records.
See the national Personal Injuries Guidelines. Checked 2 Nov 2025.
Compensation ranges you can use as a guide
The Personal Injuries Guidelines set the bands for pain and suffering. Your band depends on injury type, recovery time, and lasting effects. Your financial losses are added on top as special damages.
Neck injuries (whiplash and soft tissue)
| Severity | Typical recovery | Guide range (€) | Example outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minor | Up to 3 months | 560 – 15,700 | Stiffness with full recovery |
| Moderate (i) | 3–12 months | 15,700 – 24,600 | Physio needed, disrupted sleep |
| Moderate (ii) | 1–2 years | 24,600 – 42,000 | Chronic pain, work limits |
| Severe (i) | 2–5 years | 42,000 – 61,800 | Restricted movement |
| Severe (ii) | 5+ years / permanent | 61,800 – 78,400 | Serious lasting disability |
Back injuries
| Severity | Description | Guide range (€) |
|---|---|---|
| Minor | Full recovery within 0–12 months | 2,200 – 15,700 |
| Moderate (i) | Ongoing pain, 1–3 years | 15,700 – 42,000 |
| Moderate (ii) | Recurring symptoms | 42,000 – 71,000 |
| Severe | Chronic or permanent damage | 71,000 – 148,000+ |
Psychological injury
| Severity | Description | Guide range (€) |
|---|---|---|
| Minor | Short-term anxiety or PTSD | 2,200 – 6,700 |
| Moderate | Ongoing symptoms with treatment | 6,700 – 23,000 |
| Moderately severe | Marked life impact | 23,000 – 57,000 |
| Severe | Chronic debilitating condition | 57,000 – 148,000 |
Source basis: Judicial Council’s Personal Injuries Guidelines.
Ranges derived from the Guidelines — neck & back sections (pp. 24+); psychological injury (pp. 60+).
Irish data at a glance
| Datapoint | What it means |
|---|---|
| Rear-end share of collisions: ~25–35% | Rear impacts form a large portion of claims; proportions vary by year and dataset (RSA/IRB). |
| IRB consent window: up to 90 days | Respondent time to consent to assessment or mediation. |
| IRB aim to assess: ~9 months | Straightforward claims can be assessed within this target window. |
Data anchors: RSA statistics · IRB process.
What timeline should you expect?
Most rear-end claims start at the IRB. A fair case with admitted liability and clear medical proof can resolve in under a year. Disputed liability, complex injuries, or ongoing treatment can extend that. Below is a typical flow.
| Stage | What happens | Typical window |
|---|---|---|
| First month | Medical visit, Garda steps, Section 8 letter | Days 0–30 |
| Preparation | Gather reports and receipts, Form A ready | Weeks 4–12 |
| IRB filing | Respondent gets 90 days to consent | Month 3–6 |
| Assessment | Independent exam, award considered | Month 6–12+ |
| Outcome | Accept for payment, or reject and issue | Varies |
When you’ll actually get paid
If you accept an IRB assessment, payment usually follows under an Order to Pay. If you reject it, the IRB issues an Authorisation and you can proceed to court. (IRB process).
Evidence that strengthens a rear-end claim
Medical records
See your GP early. Tell them all symptoms. Follow-ups show how you recover. Clear records link the crash to your injuries.
Garda involvement
If Gardaí attend, get the PULSE reference. If not, make a station report. Ask how to request a copy later.
Dashcam and CCTV
Save your dashcam file before it overwrites. Nearby shops or buses may have CCTV. Ask quickly, as many systems delete within days.
Photos and notes
Take wide shots of the scene and close-ups of damage. Note weather, road markings, and signal phases. Add time and date.
Receipts and wages
Keep medical bills, mileage, parking, and taxi fares. Keep payslips that show lost income or overtime. These add up in special damages.
Tip: keep original image files with embedded dates and avoid filters. Save dashcam files in their native format. Authentic files carry more weight.
Download: CCTV/Dashcam DSAR email
CCTV & dashcam footage: your access rights
You can make a data access request to a shop, bus operator, or private party that holds footage of you. Act fast—many systems overwrite within days. Use a short DSAR email and ask them to preserve the footage while they process your request. See the Data Protection Commission for guidance: dataprotection.ie.
Liability isn’t always simple
Multi-vehicle chain reactions
In three or four car impacts, blame can split. Investigators look at the first impact, gaps between cars, and speeds. Several insurers may be involved. Good evidence shortens disputes.
Rear-end collisions on buses or trams (passengers)
Bus or tram passengers can claim for injuries from a rear impact. Claims may involve the public transport operator and another driver. Incident reports and CCTV help. Medical notes and witness details are key.
Cyclists and e-scooters rear-ended
Rear impacts on bikes or e-scooters can be serious even at low speeds. Helmets, lighting, and road position do not remove a driver’s duty to keep distance. Record damage to gear and get checked the same day.
Parked car rolled backward
If the front vehicle rolled back into you, fault can shift. Handbrake use, gradient, and mechanical checks become key. Dashcam helps.
Snow or ice push
Skids on snow or ice don’t excuse negligence by themselves. Speed choice and following distance in conditions are considered.
Waiting to turn right
Rear-ending a stationary vehicle waiting to turn right often points to following too close. Indicators and brake light function still matter.
Multiple claims from one crash
Driver and passengers can each claim for their own injuries. Settlements are separate even if liability is shared.
Rear-ended while driving for work
If you were on duty in a company car or van, tell your employer quickly and keep a copy of the accident report. Employer incident logs, tachograph/telematics, and delivery schedules can support liability and loss of earnings. Your injury claim still follows the IRB route, but fleet insurers and employer records often speed decisions.
Rear-end collisions in a hire or rental car
Report to the rental firm and keep the rental paperwork and excess details. The vehicle damage and excess recovery are separate from your injury claim. Your injury path remains IRB→assessment, while the rental firm handles repairs and any excess reimbursement.
Delayed-onset pain after a rear-end crash
Neck and back symptoms can build over 24–72 hours. Book a GP follow-up and record changes day by day. Timed notes and early treatment show a consistent pattern, which helps causation and avoids doubts about a “gap” in care.
Uninsured or untraced drivers (MIBI route)
Where the at-fault driver is uninsured or fled, claims may go through the Motor Insurers’ Bureau of Ireland (source). Report to Gardaí promptly and try to identify the vehicle. Expect longer timelines and extra tracing steps compared to standard IRB paths.
Illustrative case studies (anonymised)
Traffic lights, Dublin city — moderate whiplash
Liability admitted. GP same day; six physio sessions over eight weeks. Symptoms settled in nine months. IRB assessed at €21,000 for general damages, plus €1,150 special damages. Client accepted; paid inside 28 days. Total duration: about 11 months.
M50 chain reaction (four vehicles) — back injury
Disputed sequence and speeds. Independent medical supported ongoing symptoms. IRB assessment rejected for value; Authorisation issued. Settled before trial at €68,000 general damages with €3,400 specials. Total duration: about 18 months.
Low-speed car park impact — whiplash + driving anxiety
Insurer denied due to low damage. Dashcam showed sudden jolt and fault. GP notes and therapy records supported claim. IRB assessment accepted at €9,500 general damages and €620 specials. Total duration: about eight months.
What to bring to your first consultation
Bring your GP notes, any IRB or insurer letters, photos or dashcam clips, and a simple expense log. These items let us give you a clear timeline and a realistic range on day one.
Ahead of our call, email your GP note (if you have it), dashcam link, and a photo of any receipts. That lets us give a tighter timeline and range on day one.
Common questions around rear-end collision claims in Ireland
How long does a rear-end claim take in Ireland?
Answer: Straightforward cases can resolve in under a year through the IRB (source). Disputes, ongoing treatment, or MIBI routes add months. Payment follows acceptance of an IRB assessment; otherwise, you proceed with an Authorisation.
Why it matters: A realistic window helps you plan work, treatment, and finances before deciding to accept or reject an award.
Is the rear driver always at fault in Ireland?
Answer: Often, but not always. Fault can shift for faulty brake lights or justified emergency stops. Chain reactions can split liability across vehicles. Evidence decides—photos, dashcam, witnesses, and Garda records.
Why it matters: Knowing the exceptions stops you accepting blame—or a low offer—when liability is shared or elsewhere.
What is the Section 8 letter and when must I send it in Ireland?
Answer: It’s a brief letter of claim to send within one month (source). Include what happened, who was involved, and that you’ll claim for injury and loss. Keep proof of service.
Why it matters: Timely notice preserves credibility and leverage in negotiation or court.
Do I need to go through the IRB in Ireland?
Answer: Most claims start at the IRB. You file Form A with medical evidence. If either side rejects the assessment, you may go to court with an Authorisation.
Why it matters: Using the correct route avoids delays and protects your right to litigate later.
How much compensation is common after a rear-end collision in Ireland?
Answer: Awards follow the Personal Injuries Guidelines and your recovery time. Your out-of-pocket losses are added as special damages. Good records raise accuracy.
Why it matters: Understanding bands and evidence helps you weigh early offers against likely outcomes.
What if the other driver was uninsured or fled in Ireland?
Answer: You may claim via the MIBI. Report to Gardaí fast and try to identify the vehicle. Expect extra tracing steps and longer timelines than standard IRB paths.
Why it matters: Early Garda action protects your position and keeps the MIBI route open.
Do I have to tell my own insurer in Ireland?
Answer: Usually yes—policies require notification even if you claim off the other driver. Check your policy; non-notification can cause cover disputes.
Why it matters: A short call now avoids technical breaches that insurers use to limit help later.
Can I claim after a minor bump with little car damage in Ireland?
Answer: Yes, if you’re injured and can prove it. Soft tissue injuries can occur at low speeds. Early GP notes, physio records, and symptom logs carry weight.
Why it matters: Minor visible damage won’t block a valid claim when your medical evidence is solid.
Will a rear-end claim affect my own insurance?
Answer: If you’re not at fault and claim off the other driver, your policy may still require notice. Your no-claims discount depends on your policy terms and whether your insurer made any payment. Ask us and your insurer before you decide.
Why it matters: Avoid surprises at renewal and keep your policy compliant.
Additional resources
Injuries Resolution Board — claims process — step-by-step overview and forms.
Personal Injuries Guidelines (Judicial Council PDF) — national valuation ranges.
Revised Acts (Law Reform Commission) — consolidated legislation, including Section 8.
Courts Service of Ireland — judgments search — browse recent judgments for context on liability and damages.
Expand your knowledge
Citizens Information — personal injuries claims — plain English guidance.
Road Safety Authority — collision statistics — data for trend context.
Wikipedia: Rear-end collision — background mechanics and terminology.
Next steps and related guides
See our car accident claim process, compensation guide, and time limits overview. If an uninsured driver hit you, read how MIBI claims work. For symptoms and care, check our whiplash guide.
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