The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
Medical & injuriesspry-marmot-075

At-fault driver had bare-minimum coverage and I'm stuck with a permanent injury. Anyone been here?

So I'm about eight months out from getting T-boned at an intersection by someone who ran a red light. Toxicology confirmed they were impaired. I ended up with a herniated disc that my spine specialist says is almost certainly going to affect me for the rest of my life — I'm 26. Cool, cool, cool.

My attorney ran down the at-fault driver's coverage and... it's basically the state minimum. Like, embarrassingly low. No umbrella policy anywhere. My lawyer explained that we can demand the full policy limit and that if their insurer drags their feet or low-balls us when liability is this obvious, we might actually have grounds to go beyond the policy limit — something about bad faith on the insurer's part if they don't protect their own insured. I honestly don't fully understand that piece of it.

Here's what's messing with me emotionally: even if we get every single dollar of that policy, it doesn't come close to covering what I've already spent on treatment, let alone future care, lost wages, or just... the reality of living with this at my age. I'm not trying to be greedy. I just feel like the math is brutal.

Has anyone actually been through a policy-limits demand situation? Did the insurer pay out without a fight, or did it drag on forever? And did anyone explore underinsured motorist coverage on their own policy — did that actually help fill the gap?

I feel like I'm doing okay mentally most days but then I think about decades of potential back problems and I just spiral. Would really appreciate hearing from people who've actually navigated this.

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11 replies

  • 12
    hearty-grouse-873

    I was in almost the exact same boat two years ago — low-limit driver, serious injury, felt completely hopeless about the numbers. My attorney sent a policy-limits demand with a tight deadline and the insurer actually paid within a few weeks once they saw the medical records. The real help came from my own underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage. I didn't even know I had it until my lawyer asked. Please dig out your own policy declarations page and look for UIM — it saved me.

  • 19
    curious-crow-452

    Even when liability is crystal clear, don't expect the at-fault driver's insurer to just cut a check without at least trying to minimize something. They may drag out the documentation requests, question your treatment choices, whatever they can do to slow the clock. Stay on top of your attorney about deadlines and don't let anyone rush you into signing a release before you fully understand what future care might cost.

    • 9
      hopeful-traveler374

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 12
    keen-otter-216

    Your lawyer is right about the bad faith angle. When liability is undeniable and the injuries clearly exceed the policy limits, the insurer has a duty to protect their insured by paying those limits promptly. If they stall or refuse, the insured driver can actually become personally exposed for anything above the limit — and that pressure sometimes makes insurers move faster than you'd expect. I saw this play out more than once. Not always, but it's a real lever.

    • 11
      steady-newt-240

      I just want to say I'm really sorry you're going through this. You did nothing wrong and now you're the one doing all this stressful insurance and legal homework at 26 with a back injury. That's genuinely unfair and it makes sense that you're frustrated. I hope the UIM route gives you some relief — and please be kind to yourself through this process.

  • 16
    clever-mole-279

    Not legal advice, but the UIM question is genuinely important and people overlook it all the time. Your own auto policy's underinsured motorist coverage can stack on top of what the at-fault driver's policy pays, up to your own UIM limits. Also, if anyone else contributed to the accident — a municipality with a broken signal, a bar that over-served the driver — those are separate avenues worth exploring with your attorney. Just make sure all this gets evaluated before any releases are signed.

    • 8
      curious-passenger606

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 18
    wise-hare-460

    The emotional spiral you described is so real and so common after a serious injury. Living with chronic pain at your age is genuinely grief-inducing — you're mourning a version of your future self. Please make sure someone on your care team knows you're struggling with that part, not just the physical symptoms. A pain psychologist or counselor who works with injury patients specifically can make a real difference. Also document everything — mood changes, sleep disruption, activities you can no longer do — because that's part of your damages too.

    • 9
      spry-newt-652

      Has your attorney confirmed there's absolutely no other coverage — no employer policy on the driver, no additional household members' policies that might apply? I'd just want to make sure every stone is flipped before assuming the policy limit is the ceiling. Also curious whether the impairment has any bearing on a potential punitive damages claim depending on your state.

  • 8
    swift-fox-236

    A couple of practical things worth asking your attorney about: (1) Has a formal policy-limits demand letter with a response deadline been sent yet? That letter officially starts the clock on bad faith exposure. (2) Is there a lien from your health insurer or any government payer that needs to be negotiated down before you see any money? Those liens can eat a huge chunk of a small settlement if nobody addresses them early. Just things to have on your radar.

    • 18
      spry-swan-921

      Pull out your own insurance policy today. Look for the UIM/UIMBI line item and write down the number. That's potentially your real recovery here, not the other driver's garbage limits. If you don't have UIM or it's also minimal, that's a painful lesson for after — but at least you'll know what you're working with.