The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Property damagespry-tern-441

First accident ever — got a ticket, my car is totaled, and I have no idea what I'm doing

I'm 22 and I just had my first accident last week and I am genuinely spiraling trying to figure out what to do next. I've never dealt with any of this before and everyone I ask either doesn't know or just says 'call your insurance' like that's helpful.

Here's what happened: I was cutting through a gas station lot to avoid a backed-up light (I know, I know). I pulled out toward the side street and got T-boned by a pickup truck that was coming down the road. The impact was bad enough that my car got pushed sideways into a parked car on the street. Three vehicles total involved.

The officer gave me a ticket for failure to yield. My car is totaled — I still owe money on the loan so I'm also freaking out about being upside down on it. The truck driver seemed fine at the scene but I don't know about the person whose parked car I hit.

I've been sore since the accident (neck and shoulder, mostly) but haven't gone to a doctor yet because I'm worried about the cost and also wasn't sure if it was 'bad enough.' Now it's been almost a week and I'm wondering if I waited too long.

My questions are basically:

  • Should I fight the ticket or just pay it? It's my first offense ever.
  • What happens to my insurance rates with this kind of ticket?
  • What do I do about the gap between what insurance pays and what I owe on the loan?
  • Did I mess up by not seeing a doctor immediately?

I'm not trying to dodge responsibility here. I just need to understand what I'm actually dealing with. Please be gentle, I'm already beating myself up enough.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 24
    plain-wolf-580

    Not legal advice, just some general context — a failure to yield ticket is the kind of thing a traffic attorney sometimes handles for a flat fee, and in many cases they can get it reduced or dismissed, especially for first-time offenders. The points and the insurance impact can be significant over time, so it's at least worth a consultation, many of which are free. The fact that you have neck and shoulder pain also means this isn't just a property damage situation — you may have your own injury claim depending on how fault is ultimately determined. Worth talking to a PI attorney too, separately from the traffic issue.

    • 3
      tired-walker180

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 22
    plain-heron-537

    Quick practical list: 1) Go to a doctor today, not tomorrow. 2) Call your lender and ask if you have GAP coverage. 3) Don't give a recorded statement to anyone without knowing your rights first. 4) Look up traffic attorneys in your area and see if any offer free consults for first-offense tickets — it's worth 30 minutes of your time. You're not in as bad a position as it feels right now, but a few of these decisions have time pressure, so don't sit on them.

  • 21
    careful-hare-406

    Not trying to pile on, but I'm curious — when you say the pickup 'seemed to be going fast,' did anyone else witness that or is that just your impression? And was there a stop sign or yield sign for you specifically, or was it more of an ambiguous merge situation? The details matter a lot for how fault gets divided, and 'I had to yield' and 'I failed to yield' are sometimes very different things legally.

  • 15
    bold-newt-707

    Whatever you do, be really careful about what you say to the other driver's insurance company. If they call you — and they will — they may try to get a recorded statement. You don't have to give one. You really don't. They are not on your side, full stop. They are looking for anything you say that helps them minimize what they owe. Don't assume the friendly adjuster voice means they're looking out for you.

  • 10
    quick-finch-003

    Hey, first — breathe. I was in a really similar spot two years ago, first accident, ticket, totaled car with a loan still on it. It felt like the world was ending but I promise it's manageable. The gap between what insurance pays and what you owe is called a 'GAP' situation, and you should check right now whether you have GAP insurance on your policy or through your lender. A lot of dealerships add it when you finance and people don't even realize they have it. That alone could save you thousands.

    • 8
      swift-mole-090

      Please go get checked out — seriously, don't wait any longer. Neck and shoulder pain after a T-bone is really common and sometimes the inflammation and muscle damage doesn't fully declare itself until several days after the crash. A week out isn't too late at all, but every additional day you wait makes it harder to connect your symptoms to the accident medically. Go to urgent care or your primary care doc, tell them exactly when the accident was and what you've been feeling. Let them document everything. Your health comes first, the rest is secondary.

    • 20
      plain-fox-001

      Former insurance adjuster here. On the ticket — paying it outright is an admission, and whether you fight it can actually matter for how fault gets split on the claim. Some states assign partial fault even when one driver has a ticket, especially if speed or other factors were involved. On the parked car situation, that'll almost certainly go through your liability coverage and you'll want to make sure your limits are enough to cover it. Also, yes, this will affect your rates, but how much varies a lot by carrier and your history. Get multiple quotes at renewal, don't just auto-renew.

  • 7
    quick-heron-225

    A couple of practical things: Start a folder — physical or digital — and put everything in it. The police report number, photos of the damage, any correspondence from insurance companies, medical receipts. Every single thing. If this ends up going anywhere legally or even just through claims, having a documented timeline is really valuable. Also, get the police report as soon as it's available and read it carefully. Sometimes there are errors that can actually be corrected.

  • 5
    clear-owl-310

    You sound really stressed and that makes total sense. You're dealing with like five different problems at once — the ticket, the car loan, the other car, your pain, insurance... that would overwhelm anyone. Is there someone in your life who can help you make phone calls or just sit with you while you sort through this? Sometimes just having another person in the room helps you think more clearly.