The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
mellow-swan-598

Blew through a rural stop sign and clipped another car — what happens now?

So I messed up bad yesterday and I'm still kind of in shock about it.

I was driving on one of those back-country two-lane roads — the kind where you go miles without seeing another car — and I just did not stop fully at a stop sign. I thought I looked, I thought it was clear, and I rolled into the intersection. There was a sedan coming through and I caught the back corner of it pretty good.

Both cars are driveable but definitely damaged. The other driver — a middle-aged guy — was understandably furious. His wife was in the passenger seat and she seemed shaken up but said she was fine at the scene. Nobody went to the hospital.

I have liability coverage, nothing fancy. I exchanged info, we both called our insurance companies, and the police came out and wrote everything up. The officer was pretty matter-of-fact about it — took statements, documented the scene.

Here's where my head is spinning:

  • The fault seems pretty clearly on me, I know that
  • What does "seemed fine at the scene" actually mean for me down the road? I've heard people feel things days later
  • My insurance is going to cover their car repairs, but what if they come back with injury claims later?
  • Will my rates get destroyed over this?
  • Is there anything I should or shouldn't be doing right now?

I feel terrible about it. I'm not trying to dodge responsibility — I just want to understand what the process actually looks like from here. Anyone been through something similar from the at-fault side?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    tidy-crane-288

    Not legal advice, but generally speaking: once you've reported to your insurer and have a claim number, your primary job is to not communicate directly with the other party or their insurance company without guidance. Let your insurer handle contact. If you get any letters from an attorney representing the other driver, don't ignore them — pass them straight to your insurance company immediately. Your liability coverage exists for exactly this situation.

    • 8
      tired-dreamer156

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

  • 19
    wise-mole-123

    I was on the at-fault side of something similar a couple years ago — rear-ended someone at a light. The other driver said they were totally fine at the scene and then filed a soft tissue injury claim about three weeks later. Not saying that will happen to you, just... it's a real thing. Keep every piece of paperwork you get, document everything you remember now while it's fresh, and don't be surprised if you hear from their attorney eventually.

    • 5
      restless-late-shift198

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 17
    curious-elk-349

    Your own insurance adjuster is not your friend in this situation. I know it feels like they're on your side because you pay premiums, but their job is to minimize what the company pays out — and sometimes that means making decisions that affect you without fully explaining the tradeoffs. Be cooperative, obviously, but read everything they send you carefully and ask questions if something doesn't make sense.

    • 21
      bold-sparrow-152

      Former claims adjuster here. A few things from the inside:

      1. "No injuries at the scene" means almost nothing in terms of what gets filed later. Adrenaline masks pain. Whiplash and soft tissue stuff can take 24–72 hours to really show up. We saw delayed claims constantly. 2. Your rates — yeah, an at-fault accident is going to sting at renewal. How much depends on your carrier, your history, and your state's regulations. 3. Your insurance company will handle the property damage claim pretty routinely. The part that gets complicated is if a bodily injury claim comes in later. That's when you want to make sure you understand your policy limits.

  • 16
    bold-hare-051

    I'm really sorry you're going through this. It sounds like you're being genuinely accountable about it which counts for something. Accidents happen even to careful people — one lapse of attention doesn't make you a bad person. I hope it resolves without too much stress for everyone involved.

    • 10
      tidy-lynx-833

      Quick question — did the police report assign fault explicitly, or just document what happened? And do you know if the other driver's car had a dashcam? I ask because "clipping the back corner" can sometimes be contested depending on exactly where in the intersection everything happened. Just want to make sure your version of events is fully captured somewhere official before anything gets disputed later.

  • 11
    careful-hare-162

    The wife being "shaken up" is worth paying attention to. Psychologically and physically, people in low-speed collisions can have a delayed response — neck stiffness, headaches, back pain — that shows up a day or two out. I'm not saying this to scare you, just to set your expectations. If a claim does come in later for injuries, it doesn't automatically mean anyone is being dishonest.

    • 8
      calm-commuter302

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 10
    quick-beaver-704

    Here's the short version: you're at fault, you have liability coverage, that's what it's for. Report everything honestly, don't speculate or admit extra stuff beyond what you know, and let the process work. Yes your rates will probably go up. Yes there might be an injury claim later. None of that is a catastrophe — it's just how this goes. Take a breath.

    • 4
      honest-traveler535

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

  • 8
    candid-wren-144

    A couple of practical things worth doing right now if you haven't:

    • Get a copy of the police report as soon as it's available — you're entitled to it and you'll want your own copy
    • Take photos of your car's damage if you haven't already
    • Write down everything you remember about the sequence of events in your own words, just for yourself

    If a bodily injury claim does come in later, having a clear contemporaneous record of what actually happened matters more than people realize.