The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
Car accidentsdaring-raven-246

Car wash caused a chain-reaction crash inside the tunnel — now they want me to sign something

So this is a weird one and I'm honestly still annoyed about all of it.

Back in the winter I took my SUV through one of those automated tunnel car washes — the kind where you stay in your car and it pulls you along the track. Somewhere in the middle of the tunnel the whole thing backed up because a vehicle at the exit end got stuck and nobody was moving. The attendants kept sending cars in anyway, and I ended up getting pushed into the car from behind me. Minor but real damage to my rear bumper and hitch area, plus my neck was sore for a few weeks after.

I immediately told the manager on duty what happened. He was apologetic in the moment but then the company kind of went quiet on me. It took me months to even get anyone to confirm they had camera footage of the incident, and when I finally got to review it, it was pretty clear the staff just kept queuing cars into a full tunnel. Like… why would you keep doing that?

Fast forward to now — their claims department reached out and offered to cover what amounts to basically just my insurance deductible. They included a release form they want me to sign.

Here's my problem: my actual repair estimate is way more than that deductible amount. And that doesn't even account for the chiropractor visits I had to pay out of pocket.

  • Should I sign anything before getting a full accounting of my damages?
  • Can I push back and ask for the full repair cost plus medical?
  • Is there anything specific I should document or ask for before this goes any further?

I'm not trying to be greedy — I just don't want to sign something and then realize I left real money on the table. Any advice appreciated.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 17
    brave-beaver-576

    Do NOT sign that release. Full stop. Once you sign a release you're almost always done — you can't go back and ask for more later. Get your repair estimate in writing, add up every medical receipt, and counter in writing before you put pen to paper on anything.

  • 19
    spry-vole-496

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest — offering just the deductible is a classic lowball opener. They're hoping you don't know the full value of your claim and that you'll take the easy check to make it go away. That release they sent is almost certainly a full and final settlement release, meaning it covers everything — property damage AND any injury claims. Read it extremely carefully. The fact that you have footage showing their employees negligently feeding cars into a backed-up tunnel is actually really significant leverage.

    • 20
      swift-wren-969

      A few things worth doing before you respond to them:

      1. Request a copy of that footage for your own records if you haven't already — don't rely on them to preserve it. 2. Get a written repair estimate from a body shop (not their preferred shop if you can avoid it). 3. Compile every medical expense — receipts, EOBs, anything. 4. Write out a counter-demand with your actual documented losses.

      Also, that release form — read every line. Some of them are written so broadly they waive rights you didn't even realize were on the table. Not legal advice, just things I've seen matter a lot in these situations.

    • 5
      patient-traveler895

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

  • 15
    spry-beaver-161

    The moment a company hands you a form to sign while also offering you money, that's your sign to slow way down. They're not doing you a favor — they're protecting themselves. Don't let the friendly tone fool you.

    • 11
      clear-raven-324

      Please don't forget to factor in your neck. A few weeks of soreness after a rear-impact can sometimes linger or flare back up. I'd at least get cleared by a doctor before settling anything medical-related, because once you sign a release it doesn't matter if symptoms come back.

    • 6
      hopeful-driver925

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 17
    daring-raven-461

    I had something similar happen at a parking garage — their equipment malfunctioned and dinged my door. They also tried the 'we'll just cover your deductible' move right away. I pushed back with my actual estimate and they came up significantly. You have more leverage than they're letting on, especially with video evidence.

  • 15
    clever-vole-870

    The footage showing employees continuing to load vehicles into a full tunnel is going to be really important here — that's a pretty textbook negligence scenario (they created a foreseeable hazard and kept making it worse). Before you sign anything I'd at least get a free consult with a PI attorney to understand the full value of your claim, including the soft-tissue injury. Not legal advice, just — this is exactly the kind of case worth getting a professional opinion on before you settle.

  • 6
    clear-stoat-500

    Honestly the fact that you have video and they've already acknowledged some liability by reaching out with an offer is a better position than a lot of people end up in. You've got documentation, you've got evidence of negligence, and you haven't signed anything yet. That's actually a solid starting point to negotiate from.