The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Insurancehearty-fox-456

At-fault driver had bare minimum insurance and now I'm stuck without a car — what are my options?

I'm still kind of in shock so bear with me if this is scattered.

About two weeks ago someone ran a red light and totaled my car. Everyone walked away physically fine, thankfully, but my car is gone and I'm quickly realizing just how badly the other driver's garbage insurance coverage is screwing me over.

Their liability limit is basically the state floor — the absolute minimum allowed by law. The payout I'm getting barely covers what's left on my loan, which means I walk away with zero dollars and no car. I still have to get to work. I still have kids to pick up from school. Life doesn't pause because some stranger couldn't be bothered to buy decent insurance.

I've been doing a ton of late-night Googling trying to figure out my next move. I looked into my own policy and I think I have uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage but honestly I never really understood what that meant until now. Does that actually help here? Or is it only for when there's literally no insurance at all?

I'm also wondering if it's worth talking to a lawyer even though the physical injuries were minor — I did have some neck stiffness for a few days but nothing I went to the doctor for (probably should have, I know).

Mostly I'm just venting because I did everything right — I had full coverage, I drove carefully, and I still got punished for someone else's bad decisions. It feels incredibly unfair.

Any advice or shared experiences would mean a lot right now. 🙏

11replies

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11 replies

  • 18
    brave-dove-076

    I went through almost this exact situation last year. The underinsured motorist coverage (UIM) on YOUR own policy is absolutely what you want to look at — that's literally what it's designed for. Call your own insurer and specifically ask them to open a UIM claim. Don't wait, there are sometimes deadlines. It saved me from being completely wiped out.

    • 19
      tidy-grouse-401

      Whatever you do, be careful how you talk to ANY insurance adjuster right now — even your own. They're friendly on the phone but they're still working for the company, not for you. If you mention that neck stiffness casually in a recorded statement they will find a way to minimize it or use it against you later. Document everything first.

    • 2
      curious-walker165

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

  • 12
    swift-stoat-849

    Spent years on the inside and I can tell you — most people have no idea their UIM coverage even exists until something like this happens. It's one of the most underutilized parts of a policy. Pull out your declarations page (the summary sheet from when you bought the policy) and look for 'UIMBI' or 'UIMPD' — those are the ones that matter here. The limits will tell you what you're working with.

    Also, the neck stiffness thing? Go get checked out even now. A few days late is not too late. A gap in treatment will be used against you if anything escalates.

    • 13
      kind-stoat-650

      I'm so sorry, this sounds completely exhausting on top of everything else you're already managing. You did nothing wrong and you're still the one scrambling to fix it. I hope you find a path forward — from what others are saying it sounds like your own insurance might actually be the key here. Rooting for you. 💙

  • 17
    keen-kestrel-043

    Please go see a doctor about that neck stiffness. I know it feels minor and you're focused on the car situation, but soft tissue injuries from accidents can take days or even weeks to fully show up. Getting evaluated now creates a medical record that documents it happened — skipping it entirely leaves you with nothing if it gets worse.

    • 16
      patient-wolf-050

      Not legal advice, but a quick note: consultations with personal injury attorneys are almost always free, and most work on contingency (meaning you pay nothing unless they recover something for you). Even if injuries seem minor right now, it's worth a conversation just to understand your options with the UIM claim. An attorney can also sometimes negotiate the property damage side of things. Worth at least one call.

    • 7
      honest-survivor203

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 8
    clever-bison-853

    Three things to do this week: 1) pull your declarations page and find your UIM limits, 2) file a UIM claim with your own insurer before you do anything else, 3) get that neck looked at by a doctor and keep every receipt. Don't buy another car on credit in a panic — figure out the insurance money first so you know what you're actually working with.

  • 20
    swift-heron-541

    When you say 'full coverage' — do you actually know if your policy includes UIM or just collision and comprehensive? A lot of people say full coverage but those are different things. Worth double-checking before you assume you're protected. What state are you in? Some states require insurers to offer UIM but let you waive it, so it's not always automatic.

    • 8
      soft-spoken-sidewalk738

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.