The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancesteady-badger-601

My daughter (16) wrecked my truck in a storm — what happens now with insurance?

I'm honestly still shaking a little writing this. Last night my daughter lost control of my pickup on a rain-slicked county road and hit a guardrail hard enough to deploy the airbags. The truck is almost certainly totaled — front end is destroyed and the frame looks bent. She's been driving for about eight months and was on her way home from a friend's house when a sudden downpour hit.

Thank God she walked away with just a seatbelt bruise across her chest and a sore wrist. The ER doc said she's fine, just soft tissue stuff. No other cars were involved. A state trooper responded and filed a report but didn't issue a citation — he noted the road conditions were a contributing factor.

Here's where I'm lost:

  • I have full coverage on the truck. Does that still pay out even if she was technically the one who caused the accident? I've heard "at fault" matters a lot, but she's listed on the policy.
  • The trooper's report mentioning the weather — does that actually help anything, or is it just paperwork?
  • My biggest dread right now is the rate hike. We're already stretched thin and I can't afford my premium to double.

I've never dealt with a serious claim before. I've had a couple of minor fender-benders over the years but nothing like this. I don't even know what order to do things in — do I call insurance first, or wait for the accident report to be official?

Any parents who've been through something similar, I'd really love to hear how it went for you. And if there's anything I should not say to the adjuster, please tell me now before I open my mouth and make things worse.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    warm-hare-793

    We went through almost exactly this with my son two winters ago — icy bridge, spun out, took out a fence post. Full coverage paid for the car, no question. The "at fault" thing matters more when another person's property or injuries are involved. When it's just your own vehicle and your own policy, comp/collision is basically what it's there for. Your rate will probably go up at renewal, I won't sugarcoat that, but it shouldn't be anything like losing coverage entirely.

    • 12
      quiet-newt-327

      Call your insurance company, yes — but be really careful about how much editorializing you do. Just state the facts: where, when, weather conditions, no other vehicles. Do NOT volunteer things like "she might have been going a little fast" or "the road was slippery so maybe it wasn't her fault." Adjusters are trained to pick up on anything that could reduce what they owe you. Stick to what you know for certain.

    • 18
      spry-marmot-405

      Former auto adjuster here. A few things that might help:

      1. File the claim as soon as possible — delays can sometimes complicate things. 2. The trooper's report noting road conditions genuinely does matter. It goes into the file and can affect how fault is coded internally. 3. Full coverage (meaning you have collision on the policy) should cover your truck regardless of who caused it. That's literally what collision is for. 4. Rate increases after a single-car accident with a teen driver are real, but you can shop around at renewal. Don't assume your current carrier is your only option going forward.

    • 7
      patient-traveler291

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 17
    sharp-owl-155

    Just want to flag the sore wrist — make sure she follows up with her regular doctor in the next day or two even if the ER cleared her. Soft tissue injuries and some fractures don't always show up clearly right away, especially when adrenaline is still high during the initial exam. Not trying to scare you, just better to catch anything early than deal with it weeks later.

  • 10
    calm-badger-215

    On your question about order of operations: you can call your insurer before the official report is processed — they actually prefer that. Most policies require "prompt notification" of an accident, and waiting for the report could technically cause issues (it rarely does, but why risk it). Get your claim number, ask them to explain each step, and write down the name of every person you talk to. That paper trail matters if anything gets disputed later.

    • 7
      calm-dreamer915

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

    • 0
      plainspoken-mile-marker959

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

  • 12
    spry-sparrow-649

    Honestly, first — so glad your daughter is okay. The truck stuff is stressful but that's what insurance is for. Take a breath. You're asking the right questions and you clearly have your priorities straight. Hugs.

  • 21
    bright-swift-935

    Not legal advice, but since no other parties were injured or had property damage, you're mostly dealing with a first-party claim against your own policy, which is relatively straightforward. Where it gets more complicated is if your daughter's friend had been hurt as a passenger — then liability coverage becomes a whole separate conversation. For now it sounds like you're in a simpler situation. If the insurer gives you any pushback on the payout or tries to lowball the truck's value, that's when it's worth at least having a quick consult with a PI attorney.

  • 16
    sharp-tern-975

    Three things: (1) File the claim today, not tomorrow. (2) Get an independent appraisal of the truck's value before you accept any settlement number they give you — dealers' and insurers' valuations are often lower than actual market. (3) Don't recorded-statement anything without knowing what you're agreeing to. Some insurers ask for a recorded statement early and you're not required to do one immediately.

  • 17
    careful-finch-717

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but this is genuinely the best version of a bad situation — no one else hurt, your daughter walked out of the ER, and you have full coverage. Trucks can be replaced. You'll get through the insurance headache and come out the other side. She's probably a more careful driver for life after this too.