The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancesharp-badger-557

Backed into someone leaving a parking garage — turns out my insurance had lapsed. What now?

So I'm kind of spiraling right now and just need to hear from people who've been through something messy.

A few weeks ago I was pulling out of a covered parking garage at a shopping center — one of those tight spiral exit ramps — and I clipped a sedan that was moving through the adjacent lane. Totally my fault, I misjudged the turn. Minor damage to both vehicles, we exchanged info, seemed straightforward.

Here's where it gets bad. When I called my insurance company the next morning I found out my policy had actually been cancelled about six weeks earlier. Apparently my bank reissued my debit card after a fraud thing and the autopay for my premium failed twice. I never got a cancellation notice — or maybe I did and it went to spam, I honestly don't know. Either way, I had zero coverage at the time of the accident.

Now the other driver's family is saying they're going to pursue me personally for the repairs and also medical bills because the passenger apparently has some neck soreness. I don't even know if the passenger was buckled or what.

On top of that, someone mentioned to me that the driver might not have had a valid license — I didn't check at the scene, I just photographed their insurance card. I have no idea if that changes anything legally.

I'm not broke but I'm not in a position to just write a huge check out of pocket either. Does anyone know what actually happens next? Do they sue me directly? Can I negotiate anything? Is there any protection at all for someone in my position?

I feel like an idiot. Just looking for honest input from people who've dealt with something like this.

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9 replies

  • 22
    daring-badger-997

    Spent almost a decade on the other side of this. Here's the honest truth: when there's no insurance in the picture, the injured party's own insurance (if they have uninsured motorist coverage) often steps in to cover them first — and then their insurer may come after you directly through something called subrogation. So you might not just be dealing with the other driver, you could eventually be dealing with their insurance company's recovery team. That's a different, more organized pressure. Get ahead of it now rather than waiting for a demand letter.

  • 19
    steady-fox-293

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this much: the other driver's licensing status is potentially relevant and worth documenting — take a screenshot of whatever you photographed, save it somewhere safe. Whether it affects your liability is fact-specific and depends on your state. What matters most right now is that you talk to an attorney before you respond to any written demand. Many PI attorneys will do a free consult and can at least tell you where you stand. Don't agree to pay anything in writing without understanding what you're signing.

  • 19
    kind-owl-847

    A couple of practical things worth knowing: most states require insurers to send a cancellation notice by mail before a policy actually lapses, with a minimum notice period — sometimes 10 days, sometimes 30. If you never got proper notice, that could be worth investigating with your insurer. It won't undo the lapse but it might give you some leverage or at least answers. Also, keep a written log of every conversation you have with the other party from this point forward — date, time, what was said.

  • 15
    careful-fox-630

    I just want to say — the autopay card thing is such an easy mistake to make and it could happen to literally anyone. Please don't beat yourself up too hard. Focus on what you can do now rather than replaying it. You're already asking the right questions.

  • 12
    wise-kestrel-712

    Oh man, I was in a somewhat similar spot a couple years back — not the insurance lapse part, but the 'I caused it and now I'm terrified of what comes next' part. The anxiety is real. First thing I'd say: don't ignore their calls or letters. Ghosting makes everything way worse and signals to them that you're not going to cooperate, which pushes them faster toward filing a lawsuit.

  • 11
    curious-finch-812

    If their insurance company gets involved, please don't just accept whatever number they throw at you for the 'medical bills.' Soft tissue claims get inflated all the time. I'm not saying the passenger isn't hurt, but neck soreness from a low-speed parking lot clip can turn into a five-figure claim real fast once attorneys get involved. Don't panic-pay anything without at least one professional looking at the actual documentation.

    • 3
      honest-optimist566

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

  • 11
    keen-kestrel-600

    Blunt version: get a lawyer consult this week, not next month. Free consultations exist. Stop talking to the other party without knowing your rights. And re-activate your insurance today even though it doesn't cover this incident — driving uninsured while this is unresolved is just adding risk on top of risk.

  • 9
    steady-wolf-019

    On the medical side — neck soreness after even a minor impact can sometimes be legitimate, so I wouldn't automatically dismiss it. But 'soreness' also doesn't automatically mean serious injury. If they do send you medical bills, you're entitled to see actual documentation. Bills should itemize what treatment was actually received, not just a lump sum. That's worth knowing.