The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancespry-heron-579

Adjuster says my hood damage 'doesn't match' the crash — but it definitely happened then

Still pretty frustrated about this so bear with me.

About three weeks ago I got caught in one of those chaotic multi-car pileups on the interstate — a commercial van clipped a sedan, the sedan fishtailed and tagged my passenger side, and the force pushed me sideways into a concrete barrier on the left. So yeah, my car got hit from two different directions basically simultaneously.

Here's my issue: the other driver's insurance is accepting liability for the passenger-side damage (dented door, smashed mirror) but flat-out denying that the scrapes and cracked trim on my front left corner have anything to do with the same incident. The adjuster literally said the front damage looks 'inconsistent with the described collision mechanics.'

Excuse me??

I know that damage is from hitting the barrier when I got pushed sideways. There was zero damage there before — I literally had the car detailed two weeks prior and everything was pristine. I have before photos from a road trip but they're about 6 weeks old, and the adjuster is waving them off saying they're not recent enough to be conclusive.

The police report only describes the passenger-side impact. The officer didn't walk around my whole car, and honestly neither did I at the scene — it was dark, there was live traffic, and I was shaking. I only noticed the front corner the next morning in my driveway.

I feel like I'm being asked to prove a negative. How do I push back on this? Has anyone dealt with an adjuster just... deciding what can and can't be from your accident based on their gut feeling? What actually worked for you?

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15 replies

  • 7
    spry-kestrel-968

    This happened to me almost word for word. My car got hit from two angles in one incident and the adjuster tried to split it into 'covered' and 'not covered' damage like they were cherry-picking. What finally helped me was getting an independent repair shop — not one from their approved list — to write a written statement explaining how the damage was mechanically consistent with my described impact. Adjusters hate when a professional contradicts them in writing.

  • 10
    clever-wren-156

    I'll be honest with you — I used to work claims and this is a tactic. When there's complex multi-directional damage, some adjusters will isolate whatever they can to reduce the payout. It's not always bad faith, sometimes they're genuinely undertrained on physics, but either way the result is the same for you.

    What you need is a collision repair specialist (a real one, not a quick-lube place) to produce a written damage causation opinion. Something that says, in plain language, 'this front corner damage is consistent with lateral barrier contact during a passenger-side impact event.' That kind of document changes the conversation fast.

    • 1
      calm-survivor302

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 9
    cool-finch-108

    Never trust the other driver's insurer to have your back. They are actively looking for reasons to pay less. The fact that they 'accepted liability' for some damage doesn't mean they're being fair — it means they've already decided what they're willing to cover and they're hoping you don't fight the rest.

    • 4
      weary-neighbor186

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 17
    patient-beaver-935

    A couple of practical things that can help here: First, submit a formal written supplement claim specifically for the front corner damage — get it documented in their system as a dispute, not just a conversation. Second, check whether your state has a department of insurance complaint process. Sometimes just filing a complaint (or mentioning you're about to) shifts the adjuster's tone considerably. It creates a paper trail they have to respond to officially.

    • 2
      restless-backseat703

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 14
    genuine-badger-703

    Unrelated to the car damage but — are you okay physically? Getting hit from two directions and bounced into a barrier is a lot of force on your body even if you feel fine right now. Soft tissue stuff and even mild concussion symptoms can show up days later. Please don't skip a follow-up just because the adrenaline has worn off and you feel 'okay.'

    • 5
      hearty-mole-779

      The fact that you have before photos at all — even 6 weeks old — puts you ahead of most people. A lot of folks have nothing. Pair those with a detailed shop estimate and a timeline of when you noticed the damage and you actually have a decent foundation to work with. Don't let them make you feel like you have no case.

    • 4
      level-backseat311

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 8
    careful-wren-116

    Not legal advice, but this kind of dispute — where an insurer is segmenting damage from a single incident to reduce exposure — is actually pretty common in PI cases. An attorney reviewing your claim can sometimes send a representation letter that prompts a more thorough re-inspection. Insurers tend to be more careful about documentation when they know someone's watching. Most PI consultations are free so it doesn't hurt to have a conversation.

  • 7
    warm-sparrow-761

    Get three written repair estimates that describe ALL the damage together as one event. If every shop writes it up as a single incident repair, that's three professionals agreeing with you versus one adjuster's opinion. Numbers matter.

    • 8
      grounded-backseat476

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

    • 5
      quiet-dreamer878

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 9
    plain-vole-993

    I don't doubt you but I want to ask — did you tell the responding officer about the barrier contact at the scene, or did you only describe the passenger-side hit? If the barrier contact isn't in your recorded statement at all, that's a gap you'll need to explain. Not saying you're wrong, just saying the adjuster will use every gap they can find.