The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insuranceclever-stoat-094

Delivery box truck reversed into my parked car at work — driver's personal insurance might not cover it?

So this happened two days ago and I'm still kind of in shock about how straightforward it seemed at first but now feels incredibly complicated.

I work at a small warehouse distribution center. There's a designated loading dock area out back where vendors and couriers pull in to drop off freight. I was the only personal vehicle parked back there — I park there every single day, totally normal, totally allowed.

A driver in a large box truck (not a semi, but one of those big rentals, probably 22-24 feet) was trying to back into the dock and just... didn't see my car. Took out my entire driver-side rear quarter panel, crumpled the door, and pushed the car about six feet sideways. The truck had rental company markings on the side but the driver told me he was doing a side gig and rented it himself — it's NOT the rental company's commercial policy covering him, it's his own personal auto insurance.

Here's my concern: I've been reading online that most personal auto policies have exclusions for vehicles over a certain weight or length. His truck almost certainly qualifies as one of those exclusions. So does that mean his policy just... denies the claim? And then what?

My own insurance is basic liability only — I dropped collision last year to save money, which I'm obviously kicking myself about now.

I do have security camera footage from the dock — clear as day, his fault, no question. I just don't know what to actually do with it or who I'm supposed to be fighting here.

Has anyone dealt with something like this where a rented commercial-ish vehicle caused the damage and the coverage situation got messy? How did you handle it?

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11 replies

  • 15
    quick-elk-055

    Ugh, I had almost this exact situation a couple years back — different setting but same 'rental truck, personal insurance' nightmare. His policy did try to deny it initially, citing a commercial vehicle exclusion. What ended up mattering was whether the rental agreement itself included any supplemental liability coverage that the driver may have purchased at the counter (or that the rental company bundles automatically). Definitely worth asking the driver directly which rental company and whether he opted into their protection plan. That became my only real avenue for a while.

    • 7
      keen-grouse-363

      Do NOT let his insurance adjuster talk to you casually like you're all on the same team. They will absolutely use anything you say — even offhand stuff like 'oh I'm doing okay' — to lowball or delay. Get everything in writing, don't give a recorded statement without knowing your rights first, and document every single expense from day one. Rental car costs, rideshares to work, all of it.

    • 18
      clever-mole-672

      Did you get checked out after? I know the car is the visible damage but even a parked-car impact can jar you if you were nearby or in the vehicle. Adrenaline masks a lot in the first 48 hours — neck stiffness and headaches sometimes show up on day 3 or 4. Just make sure you're documenting any physical symptoms too, even if they seem minor right now.

  • 16
    bold-wolf-153

    So here's what's probably going to happen: his personal insurer gets the claim, sees 'large rental truck,' and immediately looks for that exclusion in the policy language. A lot of standard personal auto policies exclude vehicles over like 10,000–12,000 lbs GVWR from liability coverage. If the truck hits that threshold — and a 22-foot box truck almost certainly does — they'll send a reservation of rights letter or flat-out deny.

    At that point your options are basically: go after the rental company's own liability coverage (some states require rental companies to carry baseline third-party liability), sue the driver personally, or get an attorney involved to figure out which entity has exposure. The security footage is genuinely valuable — hold onto the original file, don't just rely on your phone recording the screen.

  • 19
    humble-stoat-840

    One thing people overlook in these situations: the rental agreement the driver signed may actually contain indemnification language, and some states have enacted laws specifically about rental company liability for third-party damage. It varies a lot by state. Also, if your employer's property insurance covers the lot or any vehicles on it, that's another angle worth asking HR or your manager about — long shot, but worth a conversation.

  • 8
    silent-newt-306

    Not legal advice, but this is genuinely the kind of fact pattern where a free consult with a PI attorney is worth your time — not because you're necessarily headed to a lawsuit, but because figuring out which policy or party actually has liability here takes someone who knows how to read policy exclusions and your state's rental car statutes. Most PI attorneys do free consultations and won't charge unless they recover something. The footage alone makes this worth pursuing.

    • 7
      hopeful-walker489

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

  • 17
    kind-crow-196

    Three things right now: (1) Get the full rental agreement info from the driver — company, agreement number, whether he bought the damage/liability add-on. (2) Request a copy of that security footage from your employer today in writing, because retention policies vary and it could be overwritten. (3) File a police report if you haven't — some insurers won't move without one for a commercial vehicle incident. Do those three things before anything else.

    • 12
      curious-fox-314

      Did the driver actually admit fault at the scene, or just exchange info? And did your employer or a manager witness anything? I ask because sometimes these drivers later claim the parked car was in a no-parking zone or improperly positioned, especially if their rental company gets involved and starts looking for an out. Just want to make sure your bases are covered beyond just the footage.

    • 7
      honest-walker460

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 10
    quiet-beaver-941

    I'm so sorry, this sounds genuinely stressful on top of just trying to go about your normal workday. The fact that you caught it on camera is a huge relief — at least no one can dispute what happened. Hoping this resolves faster than it sounds like it might 😟