The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
Insurancesteady-vole-034

Borrowed my daughter's car, got rear-ended at an intersection — whose insurance do we call?

So this past weekend my daughter was staying with us and her car was sitting in the driveway while mine was blocked in. She said I could take it to grab some groceries, no big deal.

I'm about two miles from home, stopped at a red light, and the guy behind me just... didn't stop in time. Tapped my rear end pretty good. No airbags, no injuries that I noticed right away, but the bumper has some visible damage and there's a little crumple near the trunk.

The other driver pulled over immediately, seemed embarrassed, said he was looking at his phone. We both called the police, they came out, took statements from both of us, and told us to contact our insurance companies. Standard stuff.

Here's where I'm confused:

My daughter owns the car and has it insured under her name. I have my own auto policy on my vehicles. The other driver obviously has his own insurance too since he caused it.

  • Does my daughter need to be the one to report this to her insurer, or can I do it since I was the driver?
  • Should I be looping in my own insurance at all, or is that overkill?
  • Should we wait until we have the police report in hand before making any calls?
  • Is there a window of time we have to report this before something gets complicated?

Neither of us has ever dealt with an accident where the driver and the owner are two different people, so we're just a little lost on the order of operations here. Any help from people who've been in a similar situation would mean a lot. Thanks in advance. 🙏

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    sharp-owl-772

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me — I was driving my brother's truck when someone clipped me in a parking lot. The short answer we got was that the car's insurance is primary, so my brother's policy was the one that handled the claim first. My own policy was kind of a backup. Your daughter should be the one to report it to her insurer, but you'll want to be available to give a recorded statement since you were actually behind the wheel.

    • 14
      brave-crow-486

      Generally speaking, auto insurance follows the vehicle, not the driver. So your daughter's policy would be the first to respond since it's her car. That said, your own policy could come into play as secondary coverage depending on how both policies are written — some have exclusions, some don't.

      As for the police report: most departments take a few business days to process it, but don't let that stop you from notifying the insurers now. You can always submit the report number later. Most policies require 'prompt' or 'timely' reporting, and waiting can create headaches even if you're not technically at fault.

  • 18
    clever-beaver-731

    Watch out — when the other guy's insurer contacts you, they're going to want a recorded statement ASAP. You don't have to give one right away, and honestly I'd be cautious about doing it before you've had a chance to review the police report and make sure the facts are documented correctly. Adjusters are friendly on the phone but they're fishing for anything they can use to reduce the payout.

  • 14
    daring-heron-012

    Worked claims for years. Here's the practical order of operations: (1) your daughter reports to her carrier — she's the named insured and policyholder, so that call needs to come from her or at least with her authorization. (2) Her insurer will likely pursue the at-fault driver's insurance for reimbursement through subrogation. (3) You loop in your own insurance only if there's a gap in coverage or if medical bills show up later that exceed the other limits.

    Also — even if you feel fine today, keep an eye on your neck and back for the next few days. Adrenaline masks a lot in the moment.

  • 19
    brave-swan-820

    Please don't brush off the 'no injuries' part too fast. Whiplash and soft-tissue stuff can take 24–72 hours to really show up. If you wake up tomorrow with neck stiffness or a headache that wasn't there before, go get checked out and make sure it's documented. That documentation matters a lot if this becomes a bigger deal later.

    • 3
      patient-dreamer160

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 10
    humble-swift-348

    Three things: (1) Your daughter calls her insurance today — not tomorrow, today. (2) You get the police report number and follow up online for the full report in a few days. (3) Don't post anything about this on social media. That's it. Don't overthink the rest until you hear back from the insurers.

    • 6
      thankful-backseat984

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 13
    gentle-wren-808

    Ugh, what a stressful situation — especially since it wasn't even your car. I'm glad no one was seriously hurt. Wishing you both a smooth process getting this sorted out. 💙

    • 1
      weary-rider441

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 14
    wise-mole-109

    Not legal advice, but the 'insurance follows the car' principle is pretty well established, so your daughter's policy is the right starting point. Where it gets nuanced is if her policy has any exclusions for permissive drivers or if the damages exceed her liability limits — that's when your own policy's coverage could matter. If the other driver's insurer gives either of you trouble about liability, it might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options. Most won't charge anything upfront for that conversation.