Is It Safe to Tell ChatGPT About Your Injury Case?

Injured man with facial wounds holding his head after a crash, appearing to wonder if he can sue for compensation.
Knowledge Base · AI & the Law

Is It Safe to Tell ChatGPT About Your Injury Case?

अटॉर्नी मैनी चहल द्वारा · जून 2026 को अपडेट किया गया · पढ़ने का समय: ~8 मिनट

When you are hurt and worried, it feels natural to open ChatGPT late at night and type out the whole story of your crash, your pain, your money fears, even doubts about your own case. It feels private, like writing in a journal. It is not. What you type into an AI chatbot can be stored, and in the wrong situation it can be pulled into a lawsuit and used against you. The good news is that this is easy to avoid once you understand the risk. This guide explains, in plain terms, why your AI chats are not private the way a talk with your lawyer is, and how to protect your Michigan injury claim.

Why an AI Chat Is Not Like Talking to Your Lawyer

When you speak with your own attorney, the law wraps that conversation in attorney-client privilege. The other side generally cannot force your lawyer to repeat what you said. An AI chatbot gets none of that protection. It is not a lawyer, it is a company’s software, and pouring your story into it is treated more like telling a stranger than confiding in counsel.

This is not a lawyer being overly cautious. The head of the company that makes ChatGPT, Sam Altman, said plainly in July 2025, on a widely heard podcast, that there is no legal confidentiality when you talk to ChatGPT, and that if there is a lawsuit, the company could be required to produce what you typed. That is coming from the people who built the tool. If they are telling you it is not confidential, please take them at their word.

Those Chats Can Be Saved, Even the Ones You Delete

You might assume that deleting a conversation makes it disappear. It may not. In the major copyright lawsuit against OpenAI, a federal magistrate judge ordered the company in May 2025 to preserve ChatGPT user logs, including ones people had deleted, instead of clearing them on the usual schedule. OpenAI later said that particular hold ended in the fall of 2025, but the fight did not stop there. A court went on to order the company to turn over roughly 20 million de-identified user conversations as evidence, an order a federal district judge upheld in January 2026. The point for you is simple. Courts have already shown they can freeze deletions and force these chats to be handed over, so conversations you thought were long gone may still exist somewhere.

Now picture how that plays out in an injury claim. You tell ChatGPT you “feel a lot better this week,” or you ask it whether you can exaggerate your pain, or you speculate that maybe the wreck was partly your fault. You did not mean any of it as a sworn statement. But if it surfaces in discovery, an insurer’s lawyer can wave it around as if it were a confession, even when it was just a worried person thinking out loud.

What this means for your case: Communications with your own attorney are protected by attorney-client privilege, while a chat with an AI tool is not, because the tool is a third party rather than your lawyer. In Michigan, the other side can request relevant electronically stored information in discovery under MCR 2.302, and can subpoena a company like OpenAI directly as a non-party under MCR 2.305. Your own out-of-court statements are treated as not hearsay and can come in against you under MRE 801(d)(2), which removes the usual objection to them. Sharing privileged details with an outside service can also waive the privilege, and that waiver can reach related communications on the same subject. One point of reassurance: your no-fault PIP medical and wage benefits are paid regardless of who caused the crash, so this disclosure risk mainly threatens your separate pain-and-suffering claim, and you generally have three years from the crash to bring that claim under MCL 600.5805. Keep the sensitive details for a protected conversation with counsel.

What Is Safe and What Is Not

None of this means you can never touch AI. Asking a chatbot a general question, like what no-fault means or what a deposition is, is low risk because you are not handing over the facts of your case. The danger starts when you feed it the specifics: your injuries, your treatment, your fears, your theories about fault, screenshots of letters from the adjuster. That is the material an opponent would love to read.

What you do with AIRisk levelWhy
Ask a general legal questionLowerNo facts about your own case are stored
Paste your medical details or injuriesHighCreates a record of health facts an insurer can seek
Type doubts about your fault or recoveryHighCan be read as an admission and used against you
Upload adjuster letters or case documentsHighPuts case material into a third party’s system
Talk through specifics with your lawyerProtectedCovered by attorney-client privilege

The Bottom Line on AI and Your Injury Claim

Treat any AI chatbot like a public place, not a private diary. It is fine for general curiosity, but the moment you start describing your injuries, your treatment, your worries, or your theories about the crash, you are creating a record that may not stay yours. The same caution applies to social media and recorded statements, which we cover in our guides to how insurers watch your social media और why recorded statements to adjusters are risky. When you want real answers about your own case, bring them to a lawyer, where the law actually keeps them confidential. That conversation is free, and it stays protected.

अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न

Can the insurance company really get my ChatGPT conversations?

It is possible. If your case is in litigation, the other side can request relevant electronic records, and AI chats are not protected by attorney-client privilege. Courts have already ordered the company behind ChatGPT to preserve user logs in other cases, so do not assume your chats are private or gone for good.

What if I already typed details about my injury into an AI tool?

Do not panic, but stop adding more and tell your lawyer what you wrote. An early, honest conversation lets your attorney plan around it. The bigger mistake is continuing to feed the tool case details or assuming the problem will fix itself.

Is it ever okay to use AI when I have an injury claim?

General questions about how the process works are low risk because you are not sharing your own facts. The line to avoid crossing is putting in the specifics of your injuries, treatment, fault, or documents. Keep those for a protected talk with counsel.

Does deleting the chat protect me?

Not reliably. Once a court is involved, ordinary deletion can be overridden by preservation orders, and copies may already exist. The safest move is to not put sensitive case details into the tool in the first place.

How is talking to a lawyer different?

Conversations with your own attorney are covered by attorney-client privilege, so the other side generally cannot force their disclosure. That protection does not extend to a chatbot, which the law treats as an outside third party. The consultation is free and stays confidential.

Have questions about your crash? Ask a real lawyer, where it stays private.

Attorney Manny Chahal personally reviews every case in a free, confidential consultation. Across Michigan, day or night. No fee unless we recover.

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