The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
Car accidentsquiet-newt-962

First accident ever and I'm completely lost — no one told me what to do next

I'm honestly still shaking a little writing this. Got into my first accident yesterday morning and I feel completely blindsided by how much there is to figure out afterward.

Quick version: I was driving to work on a road I don't use often, misjudged a merging situation, and clipped another car. Thankfully nobody went to the hospital — both vehicles drove away — but my front quarter panel is pretty mangled and there's something hanging loose underneath. The other driver and I exchanged info and a police report was filed.

I'm in my mid-twenties, live alone, and genuinely nobody in my life has ever walked me through what happens after an accident. I have so many basic questions and I feel dumb asking them:

1. The citation — the officer handed me a paper but I can't figure out how or when to actually pay it. Is there a waiting period before it shows up in the system?

2. My car — it was drivable so I brought it home, but should I be taking it to a dealership or an independent body shop? Does it matter?

3. Total loss — how bad does damage have to be before insurance just declares it totaled? My car isn't new but I still owe money on it and I'm worried.

4. Fault and my rates — I know I was mostly at fault here. What realistically happens to my insurance? Will they drop me?

I don't have a lawyer obviously. I barely know where to start. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

10replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

10 replies

  • 21
    wise-beaver-047

    Oh man, I remember this exact feeling. I was 24 when I had my first at-fault accident and I literally sat in a parking lot for an hour just Googling stuff in a panic. First thing — breathe. You did the right things at the scene. The citation thing usually takes a few business days to appear in the court system online, sometimes up to a week. Just keep checking the county court's website using your citation number.

    • 9
      spry-vole-958

      Here's the practical rundown: Call your insurance company TODAY if you haven't already. Like, put down your phone after reading this and call them. They'll assign you a claims adjuster who handles most of the logistics — including telling you where to take the car. Don't overthink the body shop vs. dealership question until you talk to your insurer, because they often have preferred shops anyway.

  • 18
    quick-heron-613

    Just a heads up — when your adjuster calls, they're going to be friendly and seem helpful, but remember their job is ultimately to settle as cheaply as possible. Don't agree to anything over the phone on the spot, especially if the other driver ends up claiming any injuries later. That can get complicated fast.

    • 13
      candid-swift-446

      You're not dumb for not knowing this stuff — nobody teaches it and it's genuinely overwhelming the first time. You're asking all the right questions. Sending good vibes your way 💙

  • 17
    swift-otter-375

    I used to work in claims, so let me demystify the total loss question. Insurance companies calculate whether a car is a total loss based on repair cost versus the car's actual cash value — it varies by state but often kicks in somewhere around 70-80% of the vehicle's value. If you still have a loan on it, ask your insurer if you have gap coverage. If you don't, and the car gets totaled, you could owe the lender the difference between what insurance pays out and what you still owe. Worth checking your policy tonight.

  • 16
    hearty-vole-884

    Not legal advice, but one thing worth knowing: even in an at-fault accident, fault can sometimes be shared if the other driver did something that contributed — speeding, running a light, whatever. If the other driver ends up filing any kind of injury claim against you, it might be worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney just to understand your exposure. Most offer them for free. Again, not legal advice, just something to be aware of.

  • 12
    tidy-heron-526

    Please check in with yourself physically too. Sometimes adrenaline masks soreness and people feel whiplash or muscle pain 24-48 hours later. If you wake up tomorrow with neck stiffness or headaches that weren't there before, go get seen. It's not being dramatic — it's just documenting things properly in case it becomes relevant.

    • 17
      humble-marten-844

      On the fault and rates question — yes, an at-fault accident will likely affect your premium at renewal, but insurance companies can't just drop you mid-policy for a single accident in most states (they'd have to wait until renewal). That said, read your policy documents or call your agent directly and ask them straight up. Also, keep copies of everything — the police report number, your citation, any photos you took. Even if nothing escalates, documentation protects you.

    • 5
      plain-lynx-574

      The fact that everyone walked away okay is genuinely the best possible outcome here. Everything else — the car, the citation, the rates — is fixable and temporary. You'll know exactly what to do next time, and honestly that knowledge is worth something.

    • 4
      patient-walker916

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.