The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancemellow-kestrel-635

At-fault driver's insurance refusing to replace my kids' car seats — is this actually legal?

I'm honestly at a loss right now and could use some guidance from people who've been through something similar.

My sister was a passenger in a crash last month along with her two kids (her toddler and her infant). The driver — someone she knows — was found to be at fault. Here's the problem: that driver only carries liability coverage, and his insurance company is now telling us that replacing the children's car seats isn't something they'll cover.

From everything I've read, car seats that are involved in a crash are supposed to be replaced even if they look fine — manufacturers say so, safety organizations say so, everyone says so. So how is the insurance company allowed to just... not cover them?

My sister is a stay-at-home mom right now and doesn't have extra cash sitting around. I'm trying to help her figure this out but I'm just a college student, so I can't exactly write a check for new seats either. The cost for both seats isn't small.

Some specific things I'm trying to figure out:

  • Is there any legal argument that liability coverage has to cover replacement car seats as part of property damage?
  • Are there any nonprofit programs or manufacturer programs that help with this kind of thing?
  • Should she be talking to a lawyer at this point, or is that overkill for a property claim?

The kids weren't seriously hurt, thankfully, but my sister is pretty shaken up and dealing with a lot. I just want to help her get this sorted without it turning into a huge fight. Any advice is really appreciated. 🙏

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10 replies

  • 14
    quiet-swift-403

    We went through almost the exact same thing after a crash a couple years ago. The other driver's insurance tried to lowball us on property damage and initially pushed back on the car seat replacement too. What finally worked for us was sending them the actual manufacturer's written policy stating the seat must be replaced after any crash — even a minor one. Once we had that documentation in writing, they couldn't really argue anymore. Check your seat brand's website; most of them have a formal replacement policy you can print out and cite directly.

  • 16
    careful-beaver-598

    Don't let them gaslight your sister into thinking this is normal. Liability coverage is supposed to make the victim whole — that includes property damage, and a car seat is absolutely property. What they're doing is hoping she just accepts the denial and goes away. She should put every single communication with them in writing from this point forward, no more phone calls without notes.

  • 20
    clear-newt-703

    Okay so here's the inside view: adjusters are often incentivized to close claims fast and cheap. A car seat replacement claim is small enough that they sometimes just deny it on the first pass because a lot of people don't push back. That doesn't mean the denial is valid — it just means the path of least resistance for them is to say no and see what happens.

    Have your sister file a formal written dispute of the denial and explicitly reference that car seats are personal property subject to replacement under the at-fault driver's liability coverage. Use the phrase 'property damage claim' specifically. That changes the paperwork trail on their end.

  • 14
    silent-finch-309

    Liability coverage generally has a property damage component, and car seats absolutely fall under that. The insurance company denying it outright is a position they may not be able to defend if she pushes. She should send a formal demand letter — certified mail — itemizing the replacement cost of both seats with receipts or quotes attached. If they still refuse, she can escalate to the state's insurance commissioner. Filing a complaint there costs nothing and sometimes that alone gets things moving.

  • 21
    warm-crow-108

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: property damage claims like this are well within the scope of what liability coverage is designed for. If the insurer continues to deny after a written dispute, your sister may have grounds to file a bad faith complaint depending on the state. Most PI attorneys will at least do a free consult and can sometimes send a letter that moves things faster than anything else. The threat of attorney involvement tends to change the calculus for adjusters pretty quickly.

    • 3
      patient-optimist162

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 14
    spry-newt-632

    Just want to add — please make sure your sister's kids get checked out by a pediatrician even if they seem fine. Infants especially can have injuries that aren't obvious right away, and a crash involving a newborn is something doctors take seriously. Document those medical visits too, because they become part of the overall claim record.

    • 7
      weary-rider807

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

  • 12
    clear-marmot-488

    Some car seat manufacturers actually have programs where they'll replace a seat involved in a crash for free or at a steep discount — it's worth calling the brands directly and explaining the situation. Also check with local fire stations; some communities have car seat assistance programs. It won't fix the insurance fight but it might help your sister not be stuck waiting while that plays out.

  • 17
    hearty-otter-634

    Short version: deny the denial. Send a written dispute citing property damage under the at-fault driver's liability policy. Attach manufacturer documentation requiring replacement. Give them a 10-day response deadline. If nothing happens, file with the state insurance commissioner. Don't call — write everything. This is a winnable argument, she just can't let it sit.