The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancegentle-wolf-930

My dad accidentally hit a parked car — what's the cheapest way to handle this without insurance?

So this happened yesterday and I'm still trying to figure out the smartest move here.

My dad was backing out of a neighbor's driveway and got flustered — ended up tapping a parked car on the opposite side of the street pretty hard. We're talking a solid dent along the rear quarter panel and the bumper is pushed in. Not totaled, but definitely not a scratch either.

We walked around the block, asked a few people, nobody knew whose car it was. Dad left a note with his number and the owner called a few hours later. Guy seems reasonable so far — not threatening, just wants it handled.

Here's the thing: my dad's deductible is $1,200 and I know his rates are going to jump if we file. He's already in a higher bracket because of an unrelated thing two years ago. So realistically going through insurance probably costs us way more over 18-24 months than just dealing with it out of pocket.

I'm trying to figure out which option actually makes sense:

Option 1 — Get the owner a repair estimate from a legit shop and just pay the bill directly

Option 2 — Offer to buy the car from him outright if it's not worth fixing (it's an older model, moderate mileage from what I could tell)

Option 3 — Just go through insurance and eat whatever the long-term cost ends up being

I actually know someone with a small body shop who might be able to do the work cheaper than a dealership would. That could change the math a lot.

Has anyone navigated something like this privately? I want to do right by the guy but also not tank my dad's insurance over one bad moment in a driveway. Any thoughts appreciated.

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11 replies

  • 22
    bright-owl-722

    I used to work on the insurance side and honestly? For a straightforward parked-car situation like this where both parties are agreeable, settling privately is extremely common and usually smarter financially. The rate impact over 2-3 years almost always exceeds what you'd pay out of pocket for moderate body damage. Just document everything — photos, texts, the signed release. Keep a paper trail even if the whole thing costs you less than $800.

  • 22
    hearty-dove-480

    Not legal advice, but just so you're aware — paying out of pocket doesn't eliminate potential liability if something else surfaces later (hidden structural damage, etc.). The written release the paralegal-perspective person mentioned is genuinely important. Also, if the repair ends up being larger than expected, you'll want to know your state's small claims threshold just in case things go sideways. Most don't, but worth knowing.

    • 5
      steady-wanderer407

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

  • 19
    spry-kestrel-171

    One thing worth knowing: when you settle privately like this, have the other party sign a simple release — basically a statement that accepting the payment resolves any claims related to the incident. Nothing fancy, you can find basic templates online. It protects your dad in case the guy comes back later saying more was damaged or he wants more money. It happens more than people expect, even with seemingly chill people.

    • 4
      honest-parent383

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 18
    careful-heron-434

    We did something similar when my sister clipped a parked truck in a parking garage. We just got two estimates — one from a shop we trusted, one from a random place — and offered to pay the lower one directly. The other driver was totally fine with it. Just make sure you get everything in writing, like a simple signed note saying he accepts the payment as full settlement. Saved us from a rate hike for sure.

  • 14
    spry-wren-137

    How old is the car that got hit? Because if it's already got some age and existing wear on it, the owner might try to use this as an opportunity to get more than the damage is actually worth. I'd get your own independent estimate before agreeing to pay whatever number he comes back with.

    • 3
      hopeful-driver388

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

  • 13
    bold-heron-223

    Whatever you do, don't file the claim and then try to cancel it. Insurers track that and it can still affect your dad's record even if the claim goes nowhere. If you're going private, go fully private from the start and just don't involve the insurance company at all.

    • 17
      steady-kestrel-467

      Get the repair estimate first before you commit to anything. You might be surprised — sometimes what looks bad is mostly cosmetic and a body shop can do it for a few hundred bucks. Don't offer to buy the car outright until you know what the actual damage costs, because you might be massively overpaying.

  • 13
    keen-newt-778

    Ugh this sounds so stressful, I'm sorry. At least the owner called and seems reasonable — that's honestly the best case scenario here. Hope you guys can work it out cleanly.