The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
Insurancebrave-wolf-243

My car got destroyed by an unlicensed driver — now my own insurance is denying my UM claim??

I'm honestly at a loss right now and could really use some outside perspective from people who've been through something similar.

About three weeks ago I was rear-ended at a red light by someone who, it turns out, was driving on a suspended license and didn't have a drop of insurance on the vehicle he was operating. Police came, cited him, the whole thing. My car — which I'd had for years and was finally close to paying off — got hit hard enough that the frame is bent. Shop says it's not worth repairing.

Here's where it gets maddening. I specifically added uninsured motorist coverage to my policy because I knew stuff like this happens. I don't have full comp/collision because the car's older and I was cutting costs where I could, but I made sure to keep UM because it felt like basic protection.

I filed my claim the same night as the accident. Three weeks of back-and-forth, adjusters taking forever to return calls, and today I get a denial letter in the mail. They're saying my claim doesn't qualify — and the letter is so vague I can barely understand the reasoning. They mention something about the vehicle being "not eligible" but won't explain what that actually means.

Meanwhile I've missed two shifts at work because I can't get there reliably, I'm splitting rideshare costs with my neighbor, and my neck has been bothering me since the crash.

Can they just... do this? Deny a UM claim when the other driver literally had no insurance and no valid license? Has anyone fought a denial like this and actually gotten somewhere? I don't even know what my next step should be.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 8
    bold-badger-652

    Oh man, I went through almost this exact situation two years ago. My own insurer denied my UM claim the first time around with some vague boilerplate language too. What eventually worked for me was writing a formal written appeal and citing my actual policy language back to them word for word. The denial kind of evaporated after that. Don't let them just ignore you — put everything in writing from here on out.

  • 19
    gentle-lynx-867

    That 'not eligible' language in the denial letter is a classic soft denial — vague enough that a lot of people just give up and go away. That's not an accident. They're banking on you not knowing your rights. Request a full written explanation citing the specific policy provision they're relying on to deny you. Make them spell it out. If they can't point to clear policy language, that denial won't hold up.

    • 9
      weary-neighbor326

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

  • 18
    candid-newt-691

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you — vague denial letters like the one you're describing are sometimes issued just to stall or test whether a claimant will push back. Your UM coverage should absolutely apply here if the at-fault driver had no insurance. The 'vehicle not eligible' language might be referencing something technical in how your policy defines an uninsured vehicle, but that's a stretch. I'd call and ask them to get on a recorded line and explain the denial in plain language. Then escalate to a supervisor if the answer still doesn't make sense.

  • 19
    careful-swift-921

    A couple of practical things worth knowing: first, most states require insurers to provide a specific, detailed reason for a denial — not just vague language. You can formally request the full claims file and a written explanation citing the exact policy exclusion. Second, every state has an insurance commissioner's office where you can file a complaint if you believe a denial is improper. That complaint process is free and it tends to get insurers' attention pretty quickly. Also document every call — date, time, who you spoke to, what was said.

    • 8
      weary-neighbor945

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 22
    daring-seal-595

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing sounds like a potential bad faith claim situation if the denial truly lacks a legitimate basis. UM coverage exists precisely for scenarios like yours — unlicensed, uninsured driver causes the accident. If the policy language supports your claim and they're denying it without solid grounds, that's worth having an actual attorney review. Many PI attorneys will look at a situation like this for free just to tell you if it has legs.

  • 7
    calm-beaver-581

    Please don't let the insurance drama distract you from getting that neck checked out properly. I know it's easy to put off when you're stressed about money and logistics, but soft tissue injuries from rear-end impacts can take weeks to really show up. Get seen, get it documented, and keep every single record. That documentation matters a lot if this goes anywhere legally or medically down the road.

  • 12
    hearty-hare-112

    Step one: get a copy of your actual policy and read the UM section yourself. Step two: send a certified letter to the insurer demanding a detailed written explanation of the denial with specific policy citations. Step three: if their answer still doesn't make sense, talk to a personal injury attorney before you do anything else. Don't keep calling and hoping — put it in writing and create a paper trail.

    • 2
      mellow-sidewalk106

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 9
    kind-tern-595

    This is so unfair, you did everything right and someone else's recklessness upended your whole life. Missing work, bumming rides, dealing with a sore neck AND fighting your own insurance company — that's a lot to carry. Please make sure you're leaning on people around you and not trying to handle all of this alone.

    • 3
      curious-neighbor855

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 16
    gentle-beaver-327

    Quick question — did you read your UM coverage terms carefully when you first got the policy? Some UM clauses have quirky requirements like filing a police report within a certain timeframe, or they only cover bodily injury and not property damage depending on your state. I'm not saying your insurer is right, but sometimes the fine print is genuinely the issue. Worth knowing exactly what your policy says before assuming bad faith.