The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
quiet-otter-861

Forgot to mention interior damage when I filed my claim — will they think I'm lying?

So I got rear-ended about two weeks ago at a stoplight. The other driver wasn't paying attention and hit me hard enough to jolt everything forward. My car went to the body shop and I thought I'd covered everything when I talked to the adjuster initially.

Here's the thing — my kid was in the backseat and had a water bottle with one of those metal clip attachments on it. When we got hit, it flew forward and gouged a pretty nasty scratch into the center console trim. I honestly didn't even register it in the chaos of the moment. It wasn't until I was cleaning out the car before dropping it off that I noticed it.

I didn't mention it to the adjuster because I literally forgot, and now I'm nervous to bring it up. My husband tried to buff it out with some stuff we had in the garage, which I realize now was probably not smart, so it looks a little different than it did right after the accident.

The car is already at the shop. Can I still call and add this to the claim? I'm worried they're going to assume I'm trying to sneak in damage that wasn't from the crash, especially since some time has passed and we messed with it a little. I don't have any photos from right after because I wasn't thinking clearly.

Has anyone dealt with adding something to a claim after the fact? I genuinely just forgot and I don't want this to turn into a whole thing. First accident I've ever had to deal with insurance on and I have no idea what's normal.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    gentle-wolf-204

    This happened to me — I forgot to mention a cracked piece of trim on my door when I first filed. I just called the adjuster back a few days later, explained I hadn't noticed it right away, and they added it. Wasn't a big deal at all. I think as long as you're upfront and not dramatic about it, most adjusters deal with this kind of thing regularly. People are stressed after accidents and miss stuff.

    • 17
      plain-vole-414

      From a claims process standpoint, there's usually a window to submit supplemental damage, and the shop itself can sometimes flag additional findings once they're doing the repair. I'd call the adjuster today and also let the shop know you want to add it to the estimate. Get everything in writing — emails, claim notes, whatever you can. Not because anything is wrong, just good habit.

  • 7
    brave-owl-703

    Just be careful how you word it when you call them. Don't over-explain or apologize a ton — that can actually make you sound more suspicious, weirdly. Just be matter-of-fact: 'I noticed additional damage I didn't include in my initial report and I want to add it.' Keep it simple. The more you explain, the more they might poke at it.

    • 2
      steady-neighbor151

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

  • 13
    hearty-seal-500

    Honestly, supplemental damage gets added to claims all the time — it's not unusual at all. What you're describing, a piece of interior trim damaged by an object during impact, is completely plausible and adjusters see it. The fact that you tried to fix it yourself is a little complicating but not automatically a red flag. What matters more is whether the damage is consistent with what happened. If a shop tech looks at it and it makes sense given the accident, you're probably fine. Just call and report it sooner rather than later.

    • 6
      plainspoken-road-soul418

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 9
    tidy-crane-724

    Totally off the damage topic but — how are you and your kid doing physically? Sometimes after an accident you're running on adrenaline for days and don't feel soreness or stiffness until later. Just make sure you've both been checked out if anything feels off, even minor stuff. Don't assume you're fine just because you felt okay right after.

    • 4
      plainspoken-late-shift578

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 17
    calm-elk-734

    Did you get a police report or any documentation at the scene? And was the other driver found at fault? I ask because that affects which insurance company you're dealing with — yours or theirs — and how willing they'll be to work with you on supplemental stuff.

    • 4
      plain-vole-829

      Call the adjuster today. Don't wait. Every day you sit on this makes it slightly harder to argue it's legitimate damage from the crash. You have a plausible explanation, the timeline is still reasonable — just make the call.

  • 12
    hearty-fox-434

    The good news is you caught it before the car left the shop! Imagine noticing this after you'd already picked it up. At least the repair folks can look at it while everything is still open. You're actually in a better spot than you think.

    • 10
      quiet-survivor425

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