The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancegentle-kestrel-195

File on my insurance or wait for theirs? Not-at-fault but need a rental NOW

So I got rear-ended pretty hard at a stop light three days ago — totally not my fault, the other driver even admitted it to the cops on scene. I have a dashcam that caught everything clearly. Police report was filed but I don't have the official copy yet.

Here's my dilemma. My car is sitting in my driveway undrivable right now and I have to get to work. I could file through my own collision coverage and get into a rental probably by tomorrow. But here's what's eating at me:

The diminished value angle. My car is only two years old and in great shape — or was. Even if it gets fully repaired, a vehicle with a significant accident on its Carfax is worth less than one without. If I file through my own insurer and the car ends up being repaired (not totaled), I've heard you generally can't go back and claim diminished value through your own policy. You'd have to pursue that through the at-fault driver's insurance anyway.

But if I wait and file directly with the other driver's insurance, I'm potentially looking at a week or more of no rental while they verify fault and open a claim. My own rental coverage is pretty limited too — only covers like 30 days and a low daily max, which won't cut it if repairs drag on.

I don't want to sign away any rights or complicate a potential diminished value claim, but I also literally need a car to function. Has anyone navigated this exact situation? Did filing through your own insurance first come back to bite you? Or is there a way to do both without stepping on your own toes?

Any thoughts appreciated — feeling pretty stuck here.

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9 replies

  • 12
    clever-vole-774

    I was in almost this exact spot last year. I filed through my own insurance just to get moving because I couldn't afford to wait around. What I didn't realize is that once my insurer settled with the at-fault driver's company through subrogation, I could still send a separate diminished value demand letter directly to the at-fault driver's insurer. My attorney handled that part afterward. So filing through your own first doesn't necessarily kill the DV claim — it just means you have to pursue it separately. Worth looking into.

  • 21
    warm-swift-343

    Whatever you do, don't let the at-fault driver's insurance adjuster sweet-talk you into a fast settlement before you even know the full extent of repairs. They will absolutely call you in the next day or two sounding super helpful and reasonable. That's the move. They want you to settle before you know what diminished value looks like. Don't sign or agree to anything until you have the repair estimate and ideally a DV appraisal in hand.

  • 22
    spry-wolf-096

    Former adjuster here. The officer's advice to file through your own coverage first is actually pretty standard and practical — it gets the ball rolling faster and your insurer will subrogate (recover their costs) from the at-fault carrier. The thing people miss is that subrogation also typically gets you your deductible back once fault is confirmed.

    On diminished value: you're right that most personal auto policies don't cover DV for your own vehicle. But that claim lives with the at-fault party's liability coverage regardless of how you initially filed. You can still pursue it. Just make sure you do it before you accept any final settlement from their insurer and close out the claim.

    • 7
      thankful-road-soul415

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 22
    daring-heron-456

    A couple of practical things — first, get that police report as soon as it's available, even if you have to request it online or go in person. Second, document the current condition of your car obsessively: photos, video, all of it. Third, if the car gets repaired, look into hiring an independent appraiser specifically for diminished value. Some states have specific rules about how DV claims work and what the at-fault insurer is required to consider. Not legal advice, just process stuff I've picked up.

  • 21
    calm-badger-622

    Not legal advice, but this is a really common question. The short version: filing through your own collision coverage generally does not waive your right to pursue a diminished value claim against the at-fault driver's liability policy. Those are two separate coverages and two separate claims. The bigger issue is timing — DV claims need to be made before you accept a final settlement and release the at-fault carrier from further liability. If you're serious about DV, talk to a PI attorney before you close anything out. Most do free consults.

  • 20
    daring-heron-613

    Just want to ask — are you feeling okay physically? Rear-end hits can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up for a day or two. Whiplash in particular can sneak up on you. If anything feels off — stiffness, headaches, shoulder or neck pain — please get checked out and make sure it's documented medically. Don't let the car stuff be the only thing you're focused on right now.

  • 5
    clear-otter-771

    File through your own insurance today, get the rental, and handle the diminished value claim separately once you have a repair estimate. Sitting without a car waiting for the other driver's insurer to get around to confirming fault is a real cost too. Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the functional here.

  • 18
    tidy-crow-554

    Ugh, this is so stressful. I'm sorry you're dealing with all of this on top of just the shock of the accident itself. Hopefully someone here can give you a clearer path forward — it sounds like you've already thought through it more carefully than most people would.