The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Medical & injuriesgentle-wolf-088

Barely tapped someone's car at a parking lot exit — now getting hit with a massive injury claim??

I am genuinely losing sleep over this and need to hear if anyone has been through something similar.

Back in the spring I was creeping out of a crowded parking garage — we're talking maybe walking pace — and the nose of my car kissed the rear quarter panel of the SUV in front of me. There was a tiny paint transfer, maybe the size of a playing card. The other driver got out, we looked at it together, he seemed totally fine, even kind of shrugged it off. We swapped info and I figured that was the end of it.

Fast forward several months and my insurance company calls me saying this guy has submitted a pile of medical bills through my liability coverage. The total they mentioned made my jaw drop — we're talking spinal injections, emergency room visits, specialist consults, physical therapy for months. For a contact that couldn't have moved his car more than a few inches.

I know I was technically at fault for the initial contact so I'm not trying to dodge that. But the physics of this just don't add up to me. My car's front bumper barely has a scratch.

My questions:

  • Can my insurance actually fight this, or do they just pay whatever gets submitted?
  • Does the severity of the vehicle damage (basically none) have any bearing on the injury claim?
  • Should I be doing anything on my end right now, or just let the insurance handle it?
  • Could my rates go up even if the claim turns out to be inflated or fraudulent?

I feel sick about this. Any advice or shared experiences would mean a lot right now.

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9 replies

  • 21
    brave-elk-116

    A few practical things: First, pull together any photos you took at the scene, the police report if there is one, and any texts or communications with the other driver right after. Second, document everything about your own vehicle's condition — get it photographed and maybe even get a written statement from a body shop about the extent of the damage. That paper trail matters more than you'd think. The gap between physical evidence and claimed injuries is exactly what investigations focus on.

    • 19
      bold-seal-104

      I'm so sorry you're dealing with this. It sounds incredibly stressful, especially when you were being careful and the contact was so minor. I hope the people here can give you some real guidance. Just know you're not alone in going through something like this.

  • 15
    kind-swan-167

    Oh man, I went through something almost identical a couple of years ago. Low-speed fender bender in a parking lot, other driver walked away fine, and then months later I'm hearing about all these treatments I supposedly caused. What I learned is that insurance companies actually do scrutinize these claims — they're not just writing checks without looking at the facts. Hang in there, it's a process but you're not automatically on the hook for everything they claim.

    • 15
      plain-fox-700

      Please be careful about talking too much with the other driver's attorney or even your own adjuster without understanding what you're saying. Adjusters are not your friends — even your own company's adjuster has the company's interests at heart first. Don't volunteer extra details beyond what you already reported. The gap between 'tiny scratch' and 'spinal injections' is exactly the kind of thing that gets exploited.

    • 7
      mellow-beaver-249

      I used to work on the claims side and I can tell you — low-impact claims with outsized medical bills are one of the most scrutinized categories we dealt with. There's actually a whole field called biomechanical analysis where experts look at the vehicle damage and model whether the forces involved could plausibly cause the reported injuries. A playing-card-sized paint transfer is going to raise serious red flags internally. Your insurer almost certainly has a Special Investigations Unit that will get involved. That's their job.

  • 15
    genuine-crane-039

    Here's the blunt version: let your insurance company do their job, don't say anything else to anyone about the accident, and get a free consultation with a personal injury attorney just to know where you stand. You're not necessarily screwed — but sitting around worrying without information is the worst thing you can do.

  • 12
    wise-grouse-158

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking — the degree of property damage absolutely can be used as evidence in evaluating injury claims. Courts and insurance investigators regularly consider whether the mechanism of impact was capable of causing the alleged injuries. If your policy limits are lower than what's being claimed, you may want a consultation with your own attorney just to understand your exposure. Most PI attorneys offer free consultations.

  • 10
    quick-heron-234

    Did the other driver say anything at the scene that you documented? Like did you take a video walkthrough of the damage, or get any written or text acknowledgment that things looked minor? I ask because that kind of contemporaneous evidence makes a huge difference in how seriously a late-appearing claim gets taken.

  • 8
    hearty-newt-211

    From a medical standpoint, I'd just say that while low-speed impacts can sometimes cause soft tissue injuries, the treatment pathway described sounds pretty aggressive for the mechanism you're describing. Spinal injections aren't typically a first-line response — there's usually a whole progression of conservative treatment first. That escalation would be worth questioning.