The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
Insurancebold-wolf-702

At-fault driver's insurance denied my claim even though I have it all on video — what now?

I'm honestly in shock right now and need to know if anyone has dealt with this before.

So here's what happened: I was stopped at a red light in the far left lane — not a turn lane, just a regular through lane. Light goes green, traffic ahead of me is slow to move so I'm just creeping forward. Out of nowhere, a car that was in the lane to my right decides to cut across and swing into a left turn, clipping my front end pretty hard. The impact spun me enough that I bumped the curb and blew a tire.

Here's the thing — I have my dashcam footage of the whole thing. You can clearly see the other car drifting over the lane line and making contact with me. Crystal clear. The other driver stopped briefly, we exchanged info, and everything seemed fine.

I filed a claim with the other driver's insurance right away. Sent them the dashcam clip, the police report number, photos of both vehicles, everything. Took them about three weeks and then I get a letter in the mail saying they've "completed their investigation" and determined their policyholder is not liable.

No explanation. No breakdown. Just... denied.

I haven't called them yet to ask for their reasoning — I only got the letter this morning — but I'm going to after work. I just don't even know what to say or what my options are at this point. Do I get a lawyer? Go through my own insurance? File in small claims? I feel like I'm being gaslit when the video literally shows what happened.

Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    plain-otter-995

    Oh man, this happened to me almost exactly. Other driver's insurance denied my claim even though I had a witness AND photos. What I learned is that their adjuster is literally working FOR the other driver, not for you. They will lowball or deny first and hope you just go away. I ended up going through my own insurance (I had collision coverage) and let them fight it out. It took a few months but I got my deductible back eventually. Don't let that denial letter be the end of it.

  • 16
    hearty-dove-337

    That denial letter is a tactic. Their job is to pay out as little as possible and they know most people will just give up after the first denial. Do NOT accept that as the final word. When you call them, ask specifically what their policyholder told them happened — their version of events is probably totally different from yours. Also ask whether they've even reviewed the dashcam footage you submitted. Document every call: date, time, name of rep, what was said.

    • 10
      calm-parent589

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    wise-stoat-750

    Former adjuster here. When a denial comes back with no explanation like that, it almost always means one of two things: either their insured gave a completely different account of the accident and the adjuster took their word for it, or — and this is more common than people think — your evidence wasn't actually reviewed properly and just got buried in someone's queue.

    When you call, ask to speak to a supervisor and specifically request a written explanation of the liability determination. They're required to provide one in most states. If they reviewed dashcam footage and still denied, that's a whole different fight, but find out first.

    • 17
      careful-marmot-526

      A few things worth knowing: (1) A denial from the other driver's insurer is not legally binding — it's just their internal decision. (2) You can still file a claim through your own insurance if you have collision coverage and let them subrogate against the other carrier. (3) If the damages are within your state's small claims limit, you can actually sue the driver directly, not the insurance company, and present your dashcam footage to a judge. Courts tend to respond well to clear video evidence. Not legal advice, just process stuff I've seen come up a lot.

    • 3
      weathered-sidewalk679

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

  • 16
    patient-mole-455

    Not legal advice, but I'd strongly suggest at minimum a free consultation with a PI attorney before you do too much negotiating with the other insurance company on your own. A lot of people don't realize that once you start going back and forth with adjusters, things you say can be used to complicate your claim later. With clear video evidence like you're describing, an attorney can often get a reversal or push things toward a fair resolution pretty quickly. Most PI attorneys don't charge anything unless they recover for you.

  • 20
    quiet-crane-400

    Please don't forget about yourself in all of this. Even a moderate impact can cause soft tissue injuries that don't show up until a day or two later — neck, shoulders, back. If you feel anything off physically in the next few days, go get checked out and make sure it's documented medically. I've seen people focus so hard on the car damage that they don't mention they've had a headache for a week, and then it becomes really hard to connect it to the accident later.

    • 2
      tired-parent775

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 14
    bold-vole-045

    Call them, get their reasoning in writing, then talk to a personal injury attorney. That's the short version. Don't waste too much energy being frustrated — just take the next practical step. The dashcam footage is genuinely valuable, don't downplay it.

  • 20
    clear-tern-479

    This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that you have video and they still denied it feels so wrong. Please don't try to handle this alone — even just talking to someone who knows how this process works could take a huge load off. You deserve to have this made right.

  • 7
    careful-vole-677

    Genuine question — did you confirm the dashcam footage was actually received and reviewed by the adjuster before they issued the denial? Sometimes files get uploaded but nobody actually opens them before making a determination, especially if the claim volume is high. Also, do you know if a police report was filed at the scene, and if so, did it assign any fault? That report can matter a lot in how the other insurer frames their decision.