The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionsgentle-owl-588

I caused an accident in my mom's car and now the other driver is threatening to sue me — I'm 20 and terrified

I don't even know where to start. A few weeks ago I borrowed my mom's car to run some errands. I've driven it a hundred times before, no big deal. Except this time I misjudged a turn in a busy parking lot and clipped another car pretty good. Nobody got hurt, thank god, but there was real damage to both vehicles.

Here's where it gets complicated: my mom's insurance denied the claim because I'm not listed on her policy. I didn't know that was even a thing. I thought insurance just... covered the car? I was completely wrong and now I'm paying for it.

The other driver has been texting me almost every day. At first it felt like we could work something out between ourselves, but now they're saying their attorney is going to send me a formal demand letter. The number they're throwing around is way more than I have — I'm a full-time student working part-time at a coffee shop. I literally have nothing.

I tried reaching out and explaining my situation, offered to do a small payment plan, and they basically laughed at me. I feel sick about this every single day. I know it was my fault and I want to make it right, but I don't know how to handle a lawsuit when I have no money and no lawyer.

Has anyone been through something like this? Am I actually at risk of having wages garnished or something? What do I even do first? Do I need a lawyer or is that overkill at this stage? Any advice from people who've actually been here would mean the world right now.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    brave-hare-900

    I was in almost this exact situation at 22 — borrowed a family member's car, wasn't on the policy, caused a fender bender, and spent months panicking. What I learned the hard way: talk to a personal injury attorney on the other side of this — meaning, look for one that handles defense or at least get a free consult. Some of them helped me understand what I was actually liable for versus what the other person was inflating. You might be less screwed than you think.

    • 1
      soft-spoken-overpass930

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 10
    bold-wolf-770

    Before you panic too much, ask yourself: has the other driver actually filed anything in court yet, or are they just threatening? People throw around the word 'lawsuit' constantly as a pressure tactic to get you to pay up fast. Don't make any more payment offers or admit anything in writing until you know where you actually stand legally.

    • 10
      bright-finch-958

      The insurance coverage gap you're describing is super common and people genuinely don't know about it until something goes wrong. 'Permissive use' coverage varies wildly by state and by policy. Some policies DO cover occasional drivers even if they're not listed — it's worth having someone actually pull your mom's full policy documents and look at the exclusions section carefully. The denial might not even be the final word. I've seen adjusters deny claims initially that later got reconsidered.

  • 10
    silent-sparrow-467

    A few practical things to think about: First, anything you've texted or messaged to the other driver already exists and could be used. Stop communicating directly with them right now. Second, if they do send a formal demand letter, you typically have a window to respond — that's not the same as being served with a lawsuit. Third, many areas have legal aid clinics for low-income folks that can at least walk you through your options for free. You're not out of moves yet.

    • 2
      thankful-overpass707

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

    • 2
      steady-traveler581

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

  • 18
    mellow-newt-018

    I just want to say — the stress you're carrying right now is real and it affects your health. Please don't let this consume every hour of your day. Take it one step at a time. You made a mistake, you're owning it, and that actually matters. Sort out the legal stuff, but also make sure you're sleeping and eating, okay?

  • 17
    hearty-seal-128

    Not legal advice, and every state is different, but generally speaking: a judgment against someone with no real assets or income is difficult to collect on. That doesn't mean ignore it — ignoring a lawsuit is the worst thing you can do — but it does mean the other party's attorney knows what they're working with. A free consult with a local attorney could help you understand whether you even need formal representation or if there's a realistic path to settlement at a number that doesn't ruin your life.

    • 6
      tired-driver328

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 15
    plain-vole-951

    Stop texting the other driver. Seriously, stop right now. Every message you send is potentially evidence. Get a free consult — most PI attorneys offer them and some do defense-side consults too. And pull your mom's full insurance policy, not just the summary, and read the permissive driver section yourself. You need information before you do anything else.

  • 19
    steady-lynx-338

    I can hear how scared you are and honestly that makes total sense. This is a lot to deal with especially when you're young and don't have a support system that knows this stuff. Please don't try to handle it completely alone — even just talking to someone at a legal aid office could help you feel less like you're drowning. Rooting for you.

    • 3
      kind-survivor377

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.