The Shoulder
The Shoulder
71
Car accidentscool-seal-119

Brand new car, rear-ended 3 weeks after I got it — should I trust the 'I'll pay you myself' promise?

I am still kind of shaking typing this out so bear with me.

I saved up forever and finally bought my first car about three weeks ago. First car I've ever owned outright. I was sitting in a slow-moving line of traffic near a shopping center when someone bumped into me from behind. Not a huge impact, but enough that I felt it.

The other driver gets out immediately, super apologetic, says traffic startled him. He points at the scuff on my rear bumper and goes, "that'll buff right out, don't worry about it." I wipe at it with my sleeve — paint is gone. Not buffing out.

Here's where it gets weird: the insurance card he shows me has a different name on it than his license. He's got a whole explanation ready — says the policy is under a family member who moved out of state. Okay...

I tell him I want to call the police just to get a report. He pushes back pretty hard, says we should just handle it privately, that he'll cover everything out of pocket. I call anyway. While we're waiting he keeps floating this idea of just paying me directly and skipping insurance entirely.

Officer comes, takes down the info, and kind of leaves it up to us how to proceed. The other driver promises to pay for repairs. I'm a little shaky and just kind of... agree? Now I'm home looking at my car and I'm realizing the damage might be worse than I thought — there's something off with the panel alignment that I didn't notice at the scene.

Do I just trust this guy? File with my own insurance? Go through his? I have no idea how any of this works and I don't want to get burned on a car I just bought. Please help.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 21
    plain-dove-584

    Stop waiting. File with your insurance today. Tell them exactly what happened including the name mismatch. Get a body shop estimate from a place YOU choose, not one he recommends. The 'I'll handle it myself' line is how people avoid accountability. Maybe he's genuine, maybe he's not — but you just bought this car and you deserve to have the damage properly assessed and repaired, not half-fixed by whoever his buddy is.

    • 6
      steady-driver618

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 19
    bright-raven-555

    I used to work on the insurance side and I can tell you — when the insured name and driver name don't match, that claim is going to get scrutinized heavily. Adjusters will look for any reason to question coverage in that situation. Your safest bet is to open a claim with your own carrier today and report the accident as it happened. Let them deal with subrogation on the back end. Also, the panel alignment issue you noticed? Document it with photos right now with timestamps before anything else changes.

  • 19
    swift-badger-920

    Hey — how are YOU feeling? Adrenaline is real and it can mask a lot right after an impact. If your neck feels stiff tomorrow morning or you wake up with a headache, please go get checked out. I've seen people brush off 'minor' rear-end collisions and then struggle with symptoms weeks later. Document any physical symptoms too, even if they seem small.

    • 8
      tired-neighbor614

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 15
    calm-swift-520

    Not legal advice, but I'd say this: informal payment agreements after accidents are almost never enforceable in any practical sense. If he pays — great, problem solved. If he doesn't, you're starting from scratch trying to prove what happened. Filing a claim creates a documented paper trail that protects you regardless of what he does. The mismatched insurance info makes this situation more complicated than average and worth taking seriously.

  • 13
    spry-owl-355

    Did the cop actually file a formal report or just 'take down info'? There's a difference. Some officers will write an incident report, others will just note it in their activity log which is much harder to get copies of. I'd call the non-emergency line for whatever department responded and ask specifically how to obtain the official report. If there's no report, your ability to prove what happened gets a lot harder.

  • 12
    swift-finch-452

    A few practical things: First, get that police report number and pull the actual report as soon as it's available — usually a day or two. Second, take detailed photos of everything including any gaps or misalignment you noticed, not just the scuff. Third, get at least one estimate from a body shop before agreeing to anything with the other driver. If you go the private route and the damage turns out to be more than he expected, he'll lowball you or disappear. Having a written estimate protects you. This isn't legal advice, just stuff I've seen matter a lot in these situations.

  • 11
    mellow-wren-415

    I'm so sorry this happened, especially on a car you worked so hard for. That is genuinely awful. Please just call your insurance in the morning, even just to ask them what your options are. You don't have to make any big decisions tonight. Just get the information so you know where you stand. 💙

  • 10
    bright-otter-078

    The mismatched name on the insurance card is a giant red flag. That policy may not actually cover him as a driver, which means if you try to file a claim it could get denied. Do NOT let him talk you into waiting. File a claim through your own insurance NOW and let them chase him down. That's literally what you pay them for. His charm and promises mean nothing if that policy is invalid.

  • 7
    brave-finch-708

    Oh no, I went through almost exactly this situation last year. The 'I'll pay you personally' thing sounds so reasonable in the moment but it can go sideways so fast. The guy who hit me strung me along for six weeks before ghosting me completely. Please don't wait on a handshake promise, especially when the insurance card situation is already sketchy.

    • 6
      careful-driver175

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