
Personal Injury
UK-wide · England & Wales law
AI legal guide
Start legal guidance or explore all areas of law.
Personal injury claims arise when you’re hurt in an accident that wasn’t your fault; whether at work, in public, or on the road. BriefBase helps you describe what happened in your own words, then organises the facts into a clear, solicitor-ready summary that highlights key evidence, timelines, and losses for compensation assessment.
Include details such as when and where the accident occurred, who was involved, any witnesses, medical treatment received, and ongoing symptoms or costs. BriefBase identifies potential liability, duty of care, and links between the event and your injuries, giving you a structured brief ready for personal injury solicitors or claims management processes.
FAQs
Important Questions About Personal Injury
Common UK questions on accident evidence, liability, and injury claim preparation.
Collect incident details, witness information, photos, medical records, and financial impact notes. BriefBase helps structure this into a clear case summary. For injury-related matters, link cause and impact clearly: incident or treatment event, symptoms, treatment path, and financial or practical consequences. Consistent records improve the quality of solicitor review. BriefBase can help organise the information, but formal legal advice should come from a qualified solicitor.
Related guidance
Explore Related Legal Topics
How BriefBase helps
BriefBase is an AI legal guide for the UK. It doesn’t give legal advice, it helps you make sense of your situation and produce a structured brief a solicitor can use immediately. Our guidance layers translate everyday language into the facts a lawyer needs: who, what, when, where, impact, and evidence.
Detail matters. The richer your description, the sharper our prompts and the clearer your brief. If we believe you don’t need a solicitor, we’ll say so and point you to reputable resources. We’re GDPR-compliant, insured, trademarked and a registered UK company.

What to include

You’ll leave with a concise, solicitor-facing PDF: a summary of issue, timeline, legal context, options/risks, evidence list and suggested next steps, plus our standard disclaimer. Save it, email it, whatever works best for you.


