The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancesilent-kestrel-188

First accident ever — do I call my insurance first or wait for the other driver to file?

So this happened about four days ago and I'm still kind of shaken up. I was on the highway and this truck merged into my lane without signaling — we clipped each other and both pulled over. My front quarter panel is pretty messed up and my side mirror is gone. His truck barely has a scratch.

Here's the thing: I got cited at the scene. The officer said I should have given more space, which... okay, maybe, but he literally drifted into MY lane. There was a witness but I don't know if they gave a statement or just left.

I haven't called my insurance yet. I'm honestly terrified of my rates going up or them dropping me. I'm 22 and just got on my own policy like six months ago. The other driver works for some kind of contractor company, so his truck is a fleet vehicle. That makes me think his employer's insurance is going to come after me hard.

So my questions are: 1. Do I reach out to my insurance proactively, or do I wait to see if the other side files first? 2. I got a citation — is it worth contesting it or do I just pay it and move on? 3. Should I be worried about being sued personally if their claim is bigger than my coverage?

I have no idea how any of this works. First accident, first ticket, totally overwhelmed. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would really help right now. 😞

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10 replies

  • 14
    keen-wolf-469

    I was in almost the same spot two years ago — cited, other driver had a commercial vehicle, freaked out about calling my insurance. Here's what I learned the hard way: call your insurance first. Don't let them hear about it from the other side before they hear it from you. My adjuster actually told me it looks worse when they get a claim notification before their own policyholder calls in. It doesn't feel good making that call but it's way better than getting blindsided.

  • 12
    tidy-marmot-776

    Whatever you do, be careful what you say when you do call in. Stick to the basic facts — date, location, what happened mechanically. Don't editorialize, don't apologize, don't speculate about fault. Adjusters are trained to get you to say things that hurt your own claim. Even YOUR adjuster is still employed by a company that wants to pay out as little as possible.

  • 9
    plain-wolf-118

    Worked in claims for several years. Please report it yourself — today if you can. Most policies actually require you to report accidents promptly, and failing to do so can give them a reason to deny coverage later. Also, fleet vehicle accidents almost always get reported quickly because the company driver has to fill out an incident report the same day. Their insurance probably already knows. You don't want to be the last one to tell your own insurer.

  • 14
    cool-wren-712

    On the citation question — it's usually worth at least consulting a traffic attorney before you just pay it. Paying a ticket is often treated as an admission, and in some states that can be used against you in a civil claim. A lot of traffic lawyers do free consultations and some charge a flat fee that's pretty reasonable. No guarantees they can beat it, but it's worth a 15-minute phone call before you decide.

    • 7
      mellow-heron-190

      Short answers: 1) Call your insurance today, don't wait. 2) Don't pay the ticket yet — at least look into contesting it. 3) Yes, excess judgments are real, check your liability limits. The longer you sit on this the worse your position gets. Make the calls.

  • 11
    steady-swan-900

    Not legal advice, but your question about being personally sued if damages exceed your coverage is a real and valid concern. That's called an 'excess judgment' situation. It's worth pulling out your policy and checking your liability limits right now so you know what you're working with. If the numbers feel scary, talking to a PI attorney for a free consult might help you understand your exposure before anything is filed. Most won't charge you just to talk.

  • 9
    quick-wren-767

    Are you physically okay? Sometimes adrenaline masks soreness for a few days and people don't notice whiplash or muscle strain until day 3 or 4. If anything feels off — neck stiffness, headaches, shoulder tightness — go get checked out. Don't brush it off. And if you do go, keep every single record because it matters if there's any dispute later.

  • 14
    steady-beaver-812

    Just want to say — you're handling this really maturely by asking questions instead of just panicking and doing nothing. That already puts you ahead. Take it one step at a time. Call your insurance, write down everything you remember about the accident while it's fresh, and don't talk to the other driver's insurance without knowing your rights first. You've got this.

    • 4
      patient-driver127

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

    • 0
      level-overpass637

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.