The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancebrave-fox-019

At-fault driver's insurance won't give my dad a rental — is this normal??

Hey everyone, hoping someone here has dealt with something like this before because my dad is completely lost and honestly so am I.

About a week and a half ago, a guy ran a red light and plowed into my dad's car while it was sitting at an intersection. Total fluke — dad was just heading to work. The other driver was cited on the spot, so fault seems pretty clear-cut. The other guy's insurance has already accepted liability (at least verbally), but here's where it gets frustrating:

Nobody will set him up with a rental.

The at-fault driver's insurance keeps saying they're "still investigating" even though their own insured got the ticket. My dad's insurance says he'd have to pay the rental out of pocket and get reimbursed later — which he can't really afford to do right now. He's been bumming rides to work for almost two weeks and his job isn't exactly flexible about that.

His car is newer and he was still financing it, so he had full coverage on his end. You'd think that would help but apparently not?

A few questions I'm hoping someone can help with:

  • Can he push harder on the at-fault driver's insurer to provide a rental NOW, not after the investigation?
  • Should he just go through his own insurance to speed things up?
  • Is there any magic language that actually gets these companies moving?

I feel like they're just hoping he'll give up or handle it himself. Any advice from people who've been through this would mean a lot. He's a pretty quiet guy and hates confrontation, so I'm trying to help him advocate for himself.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 14
    mellow-otter-971

    Quick question — did your dad actually check whether his policy includes rental reimbursement coverage specifically? Full coverage doesn't automatically mean rental is included, it depends on what he actually selected when he bought the policy. Worth pulling out the declarations page and checking before assuming it's there.

    • 2
      weary-driver688

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

  • 16
    humble-raven-572

    Two weeks without a car while also trying to hold down a job is really stressful, especially for someone who's already shaken up from an accident. I really hope you can get this sorted for him soon. You're a good kid for stepping in to help.

    • 2
      patient-wanderer901

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 19
    clever-vole-594

    Go through his own insurance. I know it feels wrong when it's not his fault, but it's the fastest path to getting a car. His insurer then goes after the other guy's insurer on his behalf. Yes he might have to cover the deductible temporarily, but a lot of policies will waive it or reimburse it once liability is confirmed. Waiting on the at-fault carrier to do the right thing voluntarily can take forever.

  • 20
    sharp-crow-797

    Is your dad doing okay physically? Sometimes the adrenaline of a crash masks soreness that shows up days later — neck, back, shoulders. If he's feeling anything at all, he should see a doctor now rather than waiting. Not just for his health but because gaps in medical care can complicate things down the road if there turns out to be an injury claim.

  • 15
    brave-elk-574

    A couple of practical things worth knowing: if his policy has rental reimbursement coverage, his own insurer should set him up with a car now and then subrogate (basically go after the at-fault driver's insurance to get reimbursed). He shouldn't have to front money for that. Also, every state has a department of insurance with a complaint process — filing or even mentioning a potential complaint sometimes unsticks things surprisingly fast. Not legal advice, just stuff I've seen work in practice.

    • 1
      kind-driver367

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

    • 7
      soft-spoken-late-shift843

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 17
    calm-crane-057

    Former adjuster here. Honestly, the "we're still investigating" line is used way too loosely. A police citation isn't the end of an investigation, but it's significant, and most carriers will provisionally approve a rental in clear liability situations rather than risk a bad faith complaint. Your dad can literally use those words — "bad faith" and "your state's insurance commissioner" — in the same sentence and watch how quickly things move. Not saying threaten them, just be informed and let them know you are.

    • 6
      calm-rider187

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 15
    sharp-kestrel-371

    "Still investigating" when their driver got the ticket is classic delay tactics. They know every day he goes without a rental is pressure on him to settle fast and cheap. Don't let them use his inconvenience as leverage. Document every single call — date, time, who you spoke to, what they said. That paper trail matters later.

  • 10
    warm-badger-867

    Ugh, this is almost exactly what happened to me two years ago. The at-fault driver's insurance dragged their feet on the rental while "investigating" even though their driver had already admitted fault to the police. What finally worked for me was calling in once a day and asking for the name and direct line of the claims supervisor — not the regular rep. Once I escalated it, a rental was approved within 48 hours. They were just hoping I'd go away.

    • 7
      steady-survivor246

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?