The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancekeen-marmot-135

Fender bender in a parking lot — should I even bother with insurance? Still on my dad's plan

So this just happened yesterday and I'm kind of spiraling trying to figure out what to do. I'm 22, still on my dad's car insurance, and I got into my very first accident ever. Was pulling out of a grocery store parking lot and another driver swung wide around a parked SUV and clipped my front bumper pretty good. We pulled over, exchanged info, and the guy was actually pretty calm about it.

Here's the thing — when I looked up his insurance card, it looked... off. Like the policy number format was weird and the expiration date was smudged. I took photos of everything but I'm genuinely not sure if his coverage is even real or active.

The damage to my car isn't catastrophic — mostly cosmetic, a cracked bumper cover and some paint transfer — but it's not nothing either. A friend got a similar fix done last year and said it wasn't cheap.

My dad is really worried that filing a claim will jack up our premium and he's basically telling me to just let it go. I kind of want to do what he says because I don't want to cause drama at home, but something feels off about this whole situation.

Do I have to report it even if the damage seems minor? And what happens if that guy's insurance turns out to be fake or lapsed? I don't have uninsured motorist coverage (I think?), so I'm scared I'd be stuck with the bill anyway.

Has anyone dealt with something like this? What would you actually do in my shoes?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 19
    swift-kestrel-878

    I was in almost the exact same spot at 21 — parking lot hit, guy's insurance turned out to be cancelled. I listened to my parents and didn't report it right away. Big mistake. The repair ended up being way more than the shop's first estimate once they got into it, and by then I had waited too long to file easily. Definitely don't just let it sit.

    • 7
      careful-heron-561

      Ugh, this sounds so stressful, especially being your first accident. Your dad means well but I feel like he's trying to protect you from drama and accidentally putting you at risk instead. You did everything right at the scene. Don't undo that by going silent now. 💙

  • 8
    steady-vole-617

    That smudged expiration date is a red flag. Some people carry old insurance cards on purpose hoping the other driver won't notice or won't bother checking. I'd call your dad's insurer and at least ask hypothetically what happens when the other party is uninsured — you don't have to open a claim just to ask a question. Get information before you decide anything.

    • 11
      cool-heron-504

      One thing people don't realize: in most states there's a window — sometimes as short as a few days — for reporting accidents to the DMV if damage exceeds a certain threshold, totally separate from insurance. It's not super common to get penalized for missing it, but it can complicate things later if you ever need documentation. Also, even if you don't file a claim right now, you should notify your insurance company that an accident happened. Notifying and filing a claim are two different things. Notification protects you.

  • 18
    candid-crane-630

    Worked claims for years. The premium-hike fear is real but usually overstated for not-at-fault accidents. A lot of policies have 'accident forgiveness' built in or it just doesn't affect your rate the way people think when you're not the one who caused it. Your dad's instinct is understandable but it's based on a myth more often than not. Worth at least making a quick call to find out where you actually stand before writing the whole thing off.

    • 5
      honest-commuter699

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

  • 5
    genuine-raven-308

    Can I just ask — how are you feeling physically? I know you're focused on the car and the insurance stuff, which makes sense, but sometimes adrenaline masks soreness and stiffness that shows up a day or two later, especially in your neck and shoulders. If anything feels off in the next few days, please don't brush it off. See someone. Document it. That matters too.

    • 14
      plain-wolf-909

      Not legal advice, but: if the other driver's insurance is fake or lapsed, your own policy's uninsured motorist (UM) coverage is what would protect you — if you have it. You said you think you don't, but honestly check before assuming. UM is sometimes bundled in without people realizing. If you do have it, filing is pretty straightforward and often doesn't raise rates the same way an at-fault claim does. Worth five minutes of digging through the actual policy documents.

    • 18
      curious-otter-190

      Report it. Take photos, write down everything you remember while it's fresh, and report it. You can always decide not to pursue a claim later — but you can't go back and report something you sat on for two weeks. Cover yourself first, keep the peace with your dad second.