The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswarm-wren-488

At-fault accident on my dad's policy — will my siblings' rates go up too?

So I'm kind of spiraling right now and hoping someone here has been through this.

I got into an accident last week — totally my fault, I'll own it. Rear-ended someone at a light because I wasn't paying attention. Nobody was seriously hurt, thankfully, but there's real damage to the other car and mine.

Here's the complicated part: the car I drive is technically in my dad's name, and I'm on his insurance policy as a listed driver. My younger brother and my aunt are also on the same policy. I actually pay my own portion of the premium every month — my dad just set it up this way years ago because it was cheaper when I was a teenager and we kind of never changed it.

My question is: when the renewal comes up and the insurer sees this at-fault accident on record, does the rate increase hit everyone on the policy? Or does it only affect the driver who was actually in the accident?

I feel genuinely terrible about the idea of my brother's rates going up because of something I did. He had nothing to do with it. Same with my aunt — she's on a fixed income and I know even a small increase would stress her out.

Is there any way to structure things differently going forward to protect them? Like, could I get pulled off the policy and get my own separate one, even though the car isn't in my name? Or would that create other problems?

I know I messed up. I just want to limit how much my mistake bleeds onto everyone else. Any advice from people who've dealt with multi-driver family policies appreciated.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 6
    kind-dove-602

    Went through almost this exact situation a couple years ago — I was on my mom's policy and had a fender bender that was my fault. Honest answer: yes, the whole policy premium went up at renewal. Didn't matter that my mom and my cousin hadn't done anything wrong. The insurer looks at the policy as a whole unit. It sucked and my mom was pretty upset even though she tried to hide it.

    • 1
      calm-walker232

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 16
    spry-newt-403

    From my time working claims, here's what typically happens: the surcharge from an at-fault accident usually attaches to the policy level, not just the individual driver. Some carriers do have something called driver-specific rating, where they can isolate the surcharge to you, but honestly most standard policies don't work that way and you'd have to specifically ask your insurer if that's even an option.

    The cleanest fix is usually exactly what you're thinking — spin off onto your own policy. Yes, it'll probably be more expensive for you personally since you lose the multi-car/multi-driver discount, but it stops the bleeding onto your family members. Talk to your dad's agent before renewal, not after.

    • 20
      keen-dove-303

      Call the insurance company directly — not through a third party, just call — and ask them point blank how the surcharge gets applied. Ask specifically: 'Is this policy driver-rated or does the surcharge apply to all insured drivers?' Get a name and write down what they tell you. Don't guess, don't assume, just ask. You'd be surprised how much clarity one direct question gets you.

  • 19
    cool-finch-350

    Whatever you do, don't just take the renewal quote lying down. Insurers count on families not shopping around after an at-fault. Your dad should get competing quotes even with the incident on record — sometimes switching carriers resets things more favorably than you'd expect.

    • 11
      steady-kestrel-241

      Quick question — is the car you were driving actually listed as a separate vehicle on the policy, or is it under a broader 'any vehicle in the household' situation? That might change how this plays out. Also, was the other driver's insurer involved or is this running purely through your dad's policy?

    • 1
      patient-dreamer783

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

  • 20
    cool-lynx-700

    One thing worth knowing: even if you get your own separate policy going forward, this accident will follow you on your driving record for typically 3-5 years depending on your state. It won't disappear just because you move to a new policy. So your new solo premiums will reflect it. That's not a reason not to split off — it might still protect your family — just don't go in expecting a clean slate on your end.

  • 18
    brave-raven-837

    The fact that you're this worried about your aunt and your brother says a lot about you honestly. A lot of people would just shrug and move on. I hope you find a way to make it right for them, even if it means paying more yourself.

  • 15
    kind-swift-854

    Honestly, this might be the nudge you needed to get your own policy in your own name. Yeah it stings short-term, but building your own insurance history — even with a blemish on it right now — is worth it in the long run. In a few years when the incident ages off, you'll have an established record that's all yours.