The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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My brother wrecked my truck and he's not on my policy — what actually happens now?

So this past weekend my brother borrowed my truck to help a friend move some stuff. Pretty routine, nothing sketchy — I just didn't think to add him to my policy because he almost never drives it.

Well, he clipped another car making a wide turn in a parking lot. Nobody got hurt, thank god, but there was real damage to the other person's bumper and door panel, and my truck needs work too.

Now I'm spiraling a little trying to figure out what this actually means:

  • My insurance doesn't list him as a driver. Does that mean the claim just gets denied flat out?
  • He has his own car and his own policy — does his insurance cover him when he's driving someone else's vehicle?
  • Is there anything I can do on my end to limit the damage to his driving record? He's already got one strike from a few years back and I feel terrible about this.
  • Could I get in trouble with my insurer even though I wasn't driving?

I know I should've added him when I let him borrow it regularly-ish. Lesson very much learned. But right now I just want to know what the realistic outcomes are before I call my insurance company and say the wrong thing.

Has anyone been through something like this — either as the car owner or the driver? What did your insurer actually do vs. what you feared they'd do? Any insight appreciated.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 17
    quiet-elk-016

    Whatever you do, don't call your insurer and volunteer extra information they didn't ask for. Adjusters are trained to get you talking and they will absolutely use 'he borrows it regularly' against you to argue he should've been a listed driver all along — which could give them grounds to reduce or deny coverage. Answer what they ask, nothing more.

    • 3
      weary-commuter617

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 17
    careful-owl-315

    Former adjuster here. Most personal auto policies cover permissive users — meaning if you gave him permission to drive, there's a decent chance your liability coverage still applies to the third party's damage. The stickier part is damage to your own truck, which falls under collision and could get more scrutiny if they decide he was a regular unlisted driver. The other person's claim is usually the priority the insurer wants to resolve fast. Your brother's driving record is a separate matter — that's between him, the DMV, and how the accident gets reported. Your insurance decision doesn't automatically protect or destroy his license.

    • 23
      quiet-elk-735

      A few things worth knowing: permissive use is a real legal concept and most states recognize it, so your liability coverage likely extends to your brother as long as you gave him permission. Whether his policy covers him as a secondary layer depends on his carrier and state — some policies have 'other auto' provisions that do exactly that. As for his driving record, that's tied to the police or incident report, not your insurance claim. If no citation was issued at the scene, it may not automatically show up as a point on his record — though the other driver could pursue a claim that triggers a report.

    • 0
      kind-driver454

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 15
    patient-wren-674

    Glad nobody was physically hurt — parking lot accidents can go sideways fast. Just keep an eye on your brother in the next day or two if there was any jolt involved. Adrenaline masks a lot and people sometimes notice neck or back soreness 24-48 hours later. If that happens, get it documented with a doctor right away, even if it seems minor.

  • 15
    steady-grouse-676

    Not legal advice, but: the permissive use question is genuinely the crux of this. If you gave him permission — even casually — your liability coverage almost certainly extends to him in most jurisdictions. The trickier fight is usually around your own vehicle's collision coverage if the insurer decides he was a 'regular operator' who should've been listed. Before you make any recorded statements to your insurer, it might be worth a free consult with a PI or coverage attorney just to understand your position. Most will do 30 minutes at no cost.

    • 9
      steady-survivor442

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 15
    plain-sparrow-797

    Step one: have your brother pull up his own auto insurance app or call his agent TODAY and ask specifically whether his policy includes coverage when he drives a non-owned vehicle with permission. That one phone call could change everything. Step two: don't post anything about this on social media. Step three: if the other driver files a claim, cooperate but keep statements brief and factual.

    • 0
      patient-traveler889

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

  • 10
    careful-marmot-117

    This sounds so stressful and honestly it could happen to anyone — most people don't think about adding someone to their policy for a one-off favor. I hope it works out. The fact that nobody got hurt really is the most important thing, even if it doesn't feel that way when you're staring at repair estimates.

  • 9
    tidy-wolf-655

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me — let my cousin take my car for a weekend trip and she rear-ended someone on the highway. I was terrified my policy would just drop me entirely. What actually happened was my insurer covered the other driver's damages under my liability (since she had 'permissive use'), but they did flag my policy for review. His own auto policy might have something called 'non-owned vehicle' coverage that could kick in as secondary. Definitely worth him checking his declarations page before anyone calls anyone.