The Shoulder
The Shoulder
49
warm-crane-371

Animal jumped in front of my truck — scared to file comp claim bc I've had 2 recent incidents

So this past Tuesday morning I was heading out early for a job site, still pretty dark outside. A coyote or something bolted across the road and I swerved, then another one came out of nowhere and slammed into my passenger door and quarter panel. Loud as hell, scared me half to death. Drove it to work and it's still drivable but the door is dented in and won't open from the outside anymore, and there's a big crease running along the panel.

Got a quote from a shop near me and it's not cheap — definitely more than I can just pull out of pocket right now, especially with the holidays coming up.

Here's my problem: I've had a rough year with my insurance. Had a not-at-fault rear-end collision back in the spring, and then I made a claim over the summer when I backed into a pole at a parking garage (yeah I know, I know). My dad is convinced that if I file again my carrier is going to drop me at renewal and I'll be screwed trying to find affordable coverage elsewhere.

I want to file under my comprehensive since this was a wildlife strike and not a collision — I always thought comp claims were treated differently. Am I right about that? And even if they can drop me, how likely is it that they actually would over a comp claim when the other two were different types?

Anyone dealt with something similar? Really don't want to eat this repair cost if I don't have to but also can't afford to lose my insurance.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 21
    warm-finch-506

    Former adjuster here. Comprehensive claims — animal strikes, hail, theft, that kind of thing — are generally classified as 'non-chargeable' events at most carriers. The logic is that you didn't do anything wrong, so they don't penalize your rate the same way. That said, underwriting looks at your overall claim frequency too, not just fault. Two claims in one year plus a new one? Some underwriters will flag that at renewal regardless of claim type. You're not definitely getting dropped, but I wouldn't say it's zero risk either. Call your agent and ask directly what your policy says about claim frequency. Don't file blind.

    • 8
      kind-walker508

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 18
    wise-marten-650

    You're right that comp and collision are tracked separately by most carriers. I had a deer hit my car two winters ago and filed comp — my agent actually told me upfront that wildlife strikes rarely count against you the same way at-fault accidents do. That said, every company is a little different, so it's worth calling and just asking hypothetically before you commit to filing.

    • 10
      hopeful-commuter669

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 17
    spry-heron-288

    One thing worth doing before you file: pull your policy declarations page and look for language around 'surcharge schedule' or 'non-chargeable claims.' Most states actually have regulations that prohibit insurers from surcharging for comp claims. That doesn't mean they can't non-renew you for claim frequency, but it's a different calculation. Also, check if your state has a FAIR plan or assigned risk pool — worst case, you wouldn't be uninsurable, just potentially more expensive. Knowing your fallback options takes some of the fear out of the decision.

  • 10
    tidy-dove-738

    Don't trust whatever a random customer service rep tells you over the phone — get it in writing if you can. I had an agent tell me something 'wouldn't affect my rates' and then my premium jumped at renewal. Adjusters and agents are not always on your side even when they sound friendly.

    • 7
      humble-crow-129

      Just checking — are you physically okay? A sudden animal impact can jolt you around more than people realize even at low speeds. Sometimes the adrenaline masks soreness that shows up a day or two later. If your neck or back feels off at all in the next few days, get it checked out rather than shrugging it off.

    • 9
      steady-walker445

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 6
    bold-owl-079

    Honestly the fact that you're asking and thinking it through rather than just rage-filing puts you ahead. You've got options here — call your agent, ask hypothetically, understand your policy — and whatever you decide you'll make it work. A dented door is fixable no matter what path you take.

  • 5
    quick-beaver-885

    How far apart were these two previous claims — like within the same 12-month window? And did both get paid out, or did you withdraw one? That could matter. Some carriers look at a rolling 36-month window, some just the policy year. The details matter a lot here before anyone can really tell you what your risk is.

  • 4
    keen-kestrel-561

    You pay for comprehensive for exactly this situation. File the claim. The fear of 'what if' shouldn't cost you hundreds or thousands out of pocket. If they drop you, you deal with it then — but they probably won't over a comp claim.