The Shoulder
The Shoulder
52
Property damagekind-vole-451

Delivery company's driver totaled my car and now their insurer is ghosting me — do I have options?

I'll try to keep this concise but it's been a wild two months so bear with me.

A driver for one of those third-party delivery contractors — you know, the ones driving beat-up minivans with a little logo magnet slapped on the side — blew through a stop sign and T-boned me at an intersection near my house. Full stop: their fault, confirmed by two witnesses and a doorbell camera from a neighbor. My car got towed. I ended up in urgent care that same night with neck and shoulder pain.

I filed a claim directly with the delivery company first. Got passed around to like four different reps over three weeks. Each one told me something slightly different — "we'll cover the vehicle," "we'll cover medical," "actually talk to our insurance partner" — you get the idea. Classic runaround.

Finally got connected to their actual insurer. Had one decent conversation where it seemed like things were moving. Then silence. Two weeks of silence. I've called and emailed. I got ONE callback where the adjuster basically said my claim was "under review" and gave me zero timeline.

Meanwhile:

  • My car is still not replaced
  • I've been paying out of pocket for a rental
  • My neck still hurts and I have a follow-up MRI scheduled

I'm not trying to be greedy. I just want my car fixed, my medical bills covered, and to stop spending my lunch breaks on hold.

My sister keeps telling me to just talk to a lawyer. Is she right? Does it even make sense at this stage, or should I keep pushing the insurer myself a little longer? Has anyone dealt with a commercial driver's company stonewalling like this?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    genuine-otter-652

    Not legal advice, but commercially-operated vehicles and their insurers operate very differently from standard personal auto claims. When there's clear liability evidence like you're describing — witnesses, video — and the insurer is still stalling, that's exactly the kind of case attorneys take seriously. The fact that you have ongoing medical treatment also matters a lot for the bigger picture here. Definitely worth a free consult before you accept anything or sign anything. Don't sign anything.

    • 10
      gentle-rider115

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 15
    plain-swan-605

    Almost identical thing happened to me with a contractor driver two years ago. The multi-layer setup — delivery company, then their insurance partner — is designed to be confusing, and I genuinely don't think it's accidental. I held out trying to handle it myself for almost six weeks and got nowhere. The day I mentioned I was talking to an attorney, suddenly things started moving. Make of that what you will.

    • 18
      kind-owl-563

      "Under review" with no timeline is adjuster-speak for "we're waiting to see if you go away." They do this. The rental car costs piling up on YOUR side while they drag their feet is not an accident — it's pressure. Don't let them outlast you.

    • 5
      gentle-commuter608

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

  • 15
    wise-otter-738

    I used to work on the commercial auto side and I can tell you that contractor/vendor claims get deprioritized all the time internally. There's often a question of which policy even applies — the contractor's personal policy, the delivery company's commercial umbrella, or the insurer they contract with — and nobody wants to own it. That confusion genuinely does cause delays, but it also gets exploited. If you have a witness and camera footage, your position is actually really strong. Document everything you've spent (rental receipts, medical copays, time off work) and keep it organized.

  • 12
    swift-raven-595

    Honestly just reading this stressed me out on your behalf. You did everything right — you reported it, you followed up, you were patient — and they're just… not helping you. Your sister is right. At least talk to someone who knows how this works. You deserve to have an actual advocate in your corner.

  • 10
    keen-swift-742

    A couple of practical things: send a formal written demand letter to both the delivery company AND their insurer via certified mail — not just calls and emails. State clearly what you're owed and give a deadline (10-14 business days is typical). Keep a log of every call — date, time, rep name, what was said. If you do end up with an attorney, that paper trail is gold. Also, most PI attorneys do free consultations, so there's no real downside to at least having a conversation.

  • 5
    careful-wolf-982

    Please don't let the insurance stress make you delay or skip that MRI. Neck injuries from side impacts can look minor at first and then become a real problem weeks later. Make sure everything is documented through your doctor — every symptom, every visit. That record matters medically AND if this ends up in any kind of legal process.

    • 5
      plainspoken-late-shift219

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

    • 2
      honest-walker704

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 5
    quick-swan-410

    Stop calling. Start writing. Certified letters only from here on out. And yes, talk to a lawyer this week — not next week, this week. Commercial insurers respect people who are clearly prepared to escalate. Right now they have zero reason to move fast.