The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbold-kestrel-931

Clipped a parked car's mirror pulling out of a tight spot — did I just commit a hit and run?

So this happened yesterday and I haven't been able to sleep since.

I was leaving a packed parking garage downtown and my passenger side scraped against a parked SUV as I squeezed through a narrow exit lane. I heard a crunch and immediately felt sick. The problem was there was literally nowhere to stop — I was in a one-way exit chute with cars lined up behind me honking. I had to pull all the way out onto the street before I could even think about stopping.

By the time I looped back around and found street parking maybe 4-5 minutes later, the SUV was already gone. I have no idea if the owner even noticed or if they drove off not realizing anything happened.

I did the only thing I could think of — I called the non-emergency police line and self-reported the whole thing. They took down my name, plate number, and contact info and said someone would follow up if the other driver called in a complaint.

Here's what's eating me: does proactively calling the police count for anything, or am I still technically on the hook for a hit and run just because I didn't leave a note? I genuinely tried to do the right thing. There was no way to leave a note on a car that was already gone.

I have full coverage on my policy. I'm not trying to dodge responsibility at all — I just don't want a criminal charge hanging over me when my intentions were completely honest.

Has anyone dealt with anything like this? What actually happens next?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 17
    candid-badger-389

    This might sound off-topic but please don't underestimate the stress this kind of thing puts on you physically. The anxiety, not sleeping — that's real. Take care of yourself while you sort this out. Stress makes everything harder to navigate clearly.

    • 6
      humble-tern-656

      You called the cops on yourself. That's basically the opposite of a hit and run. Report it to your own insurance today, keep the police report reference number somewhere safe, and stop losing sleep over it. You did what you were supposed to do.

    • 4
      patient-commuter122

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 14
    patient-bison-806

    I went through something similar last year — tapped a car in a crowded lot, couldn't find the owner, panicked. Calling the non-emergency line was literally the exact advice a friend gave me and it genuinely seemed to matter. The fact that you self-reported before anyone even complained says a lot. I never heard anything back after I reported mine and it just kind of... went away. Fingers crossed yours does too.

    • 8
      quiet-dove-783

      Not legal advice, but in most states the core element of a hit and run is knowingly leaving the scene without making a reasonable attempt to exchange info or report. Proactively calling the police before any complaint was filed is generally viewed as a good-faith effort that weighs heavily in your favor. Whether it fully shields you depends on your state's specific statute. If you get any kind of follow-up from police or the other driver's insurance, I'd talk to an attorney before making any additional statements.

  • 14
    gentle-elk-026

    Just be careful if the other driver's insurance contacts you. Even if you did everything right, adjusters can twist your words during a recorded statement. You don't have to give a recorded statement to the other person's insurance — only your own carrier can really require that of you. Don't let them pressure you into saying something that makes it sound worse than it was.

  • 11
    keen-wren-809

    Worked claims for years. When someone self-reports to police and their own insurance before anything escalates, it completely changes the tone of how a file gets handled. You're not a fleeing driver in the eyes of most adjusters — you're someone who had an awkward situation and did the responsible thing. Make sure you also report it to your own insurance carrier soon, even if nothing comes of it. You want a paper trail showing you were transparent from the start.

    • 0
      weary-walker588

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

  • 10
    quiet-wolf-421

    The police report number they gave you when you called in — save that. Write down the exact time you called, who you spoke with if they gave a name, and what they told you. If this ever becomes a dispute, that documentation is your best friend. Also take photos of your vehicle's damage right now if you haven't already. Evidence of the actual impact point can help establish what really happened.

  • 6
    bright-swan-947

    One thing I'd want to know — did the police actually give you a report number or confirmation, or did they just say 'okay thanks' and hang up? Because there's a difference between them actually logging it and just taking your info informally. Worth following up to make sure there's an actual record of your call.

    • 7
      gentle-neighbor479

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