The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
patient-mole-939

Crashed my car — still on parents' policy after moving out. Am I just screwed?

So this happened four days ago and I'm still kind of in shock honestly. I rear-ended someone at a light — totally my fault, I'll own that. The other driver seemed fine at the scene, my car is definitely not drivable and will probably be written off.

Here's where it gets complicated. I'm still listed on my parents' insurance because I only moved into my own apartment about six weeks ago. I kept meaning to sort out my own policy but honestly life got busy with the move and I just hadn't gotten around to it yet. The car is financed and I do have gap coverage through the dealership.

I'm terrified the insurer is going to find out I don't live at my parents' address anymore and deny the whole claim. Like, is that actually a thing that happens? I don't know if the policy requires me to be a resident of their household or what the exact language is.

I called my parents and they're being supportive but also stressed. My dad seems to think it'll be fine but he's not exactly an insurance expert.

A few things I'm trying to figure out:

  • Does living at a different address automatically void my coverage?
  • Should I say anything proactively to the insurance company or just wait and see?
  • If they do deny it, is there any kind of appeal process that actually works?

I'm not trying to commit fraud or anything, I just genuinely haven't had time to switch policies yet. Any experience with this kind of situation would mean a lot right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 7
    steady-newt-894

    I was in a weirdly similar spot when I was 23 — still on my parents' policy a couple months after moving out. The insurer did ask questions about my residence but ultimately honored the claim because I was still listed as a covered driver and hadn't formally been removed. The key thing they looked at was whether the policy was still active and whether I was still named on it. Fingers crossed yours goes the same way.

    • 11
      bold-dove-798

      Okay so I used to work claims, and this comes up more than people think. Most personal auto policies define a covered driver as a 'resident relative' — meaning someone who lives in the same household. Once you've moved out, technically you may no longer meet that definition.

      That said, six weeks is a gray area. Adjusters are trained to ask questions about when the move happened and whether the policyholder disclosed the change. If your parents genuinely didn't know they needed to update the policy, that context matters. It's not a guaranteed denial — but you should be prepared for scrutiny. Do NOT volunteer extra information to the adjuster before you understand where things stand. Answer questions honestly, but don't narrate your whole situation unprompted.

    • 7
      mellow-offramp669

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 8
    tidy-bison-253

    Please be careful here. Insurance companies will absolutely use the 'resident relative' clause to deny claims if they can. They have investigators whose whole job is finding reasons not to pay. I'm not saying lie — never do that — but don't go out of your way to hand them ammunition either. Get a clear picture of exactly what your parents' policy says before you say anything beyond the basics.

    • 13
      keen-grouse-748

      A couple of practical things: first, get a copy of the actual policy declarations page and read the definitions section — specifically how it defines 'insured' and 'household member.' Second, if a denial comes, most states require insurers to follow a formal internal appeals process before you can escalate to your state's department of insurance. That DOI complaint route is free and sometimes surprisingly effective at getting insurers to take a second look. Document every conversation — dates, names, what was said.

    • 7
      gentle-traveler131

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

  • 8
    quick-beaver-366

    Not legal advice, but this is actually a fairly fact-specific question that turns on the exact policy language and your state's case law around 'household' definitions. Some courts have found that a temporary or recent move doesn't automatically sever coverage. If the claim gets denied, that denial letter is important — it'll cite the exact policy provision they're relying on, and that's what any appeal or legal challenge would target. Might be worth a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options before anything escalates.

  • 16
    warm-finch-708

    Hey, just checking — how are YOU doing physically? Sometimes the adrenaline of the crash plus the stress of the insurance situation masks symptoms that show up a day or two later. If you notice any neck stiffness, headaches, or back pain in the next week, please go get checked out. Don't brush it off just because you felt okay at the scene.

  • 19
    humble-hare-805

    Here's the blunt version: you need to actually read the policy, not guess about it. Call your parents tonight and have them dig it out or pull it up online. Look for the words 'resident' and 'household.' If the language is ambiguous, that ambiguity often works in the insured's favor legally. Stop spiraling until you know what the policy actually says.

    • 10
      hopeful-optimist810

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

  • 8
    bold-seal-250

    Six weeks is not a long time, and you haven't been formally removed from the policy. That works in your favor. Also — you have gap coverage, which means even in a worst-case scenario you're not going to be stuck paying off a loan on a car you can't drive. That's something. Take it one step at a time.