The Shoulder
The Shoulder
48
clear-kestrel-420

Friend borrowed my car without asking on a trip and wrecked it — now what?

Still kind of in shock writing this out.

So a group of us rented a cabin for a long weekend. I drove us all out there in my car. First morning, I wake up and my car is just… gone from the driveway. Turns out one of my friends decided to take it for an early errand run without asking a single person. Didn't leave a note, didn't text — nothing.

An hour later I get a call. He ran off the road on a rural highway, clipped a guardrail, and the front end is pretty mangled. He's physically fine (thankfully), but my car looks rough. We had it towed to a local shop and they're still assessing whether it's repairable or a total loss.

Here's where it gets complicated:

  • My friend doesn't have his own auto policy. He's occasionally on his parents' plan but nobody's sure if that covers him driving my vehicle.
  • My policy has pretty standard coverage but I don't know if a non-listed, unauthorized driver changes anything.
  • I'm terrified of filing a claim and watching my premium explode — I already pay a lot and I can't absorb a big rate hike.

My friend says he wants to "make it right" and I believe he means it, but I have no idea what that actually looks like in practice. Private payment? Going through insurance? Both?

Has anyone dealt with something like this? Did you file or handle it privately? Any regrets either way?

Also — and I feel weird even typing this — is it possible his parents' insurance could cover any of this since he lives with them?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 7
    warm-grouse-711

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me a couple years back — different circumstances but same core mess of 'unauthorized driver, now what.' What I learned the hard way: get an actual repair estimate in writing BEFORE you decide anything. Once you know the real number, the 'he'll pay me back privately' conversation gets a lot more concrete really fast. Some people mean well until they see the total.

    • 7
      gentle-passenger917

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

    • 8
      soft-spoken-mile-marker810

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 11
    genuine-tern-529

    Former auto claims adjuster here. A few things worth knowing: most personal auto policies follow the car, not the driver — meaning if someone takes your vehicle without permission, your own collision coverage is often still on the hook, but 'permissive use' language varies wildly by carrier. The key word in your policy will be 'permissive use' — if the use was clearly unauthorized, some carriers will push back harder on the claim.

    Also, whether his parents' policy extends to him driving a third party's vehicle depends entirely on the specific policy language. It's possible but far from guaranteed. I'd honestly pull out your declarations page tonight and read the 'who is an insured' and 'permissive use' sections. That'll tell you a lot.

    • 9
      gentle-traveler612

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 19
    candid-finch-933

    Just a heads up — if you DO file a claim, don't be surprised if your adjuster's first move is to find a reason the damage falls on YOU. Unauthorized use is one of those gray zones adjusters sometimes exploit to minimize payouts. Document everything obsessively: photos, the tow receipt, any texts from your friend admitting what happened. You want a paper trail before you talk to anyone officially.

  • 15
    humble-badger-503

    The parents' insurance angle is worth a real phone call to an insurance professional (not just a random Google search). Some family umbrella or household policies do extend to adult children driving non-household vehicles in limited situations. I'm not saying it'll pan out, but it costs nothing to ask.

    If your friend is genuinely willing to cover costs privately, get that in writing — even a simple signed agreement spelling out what he owes and a payment timeline. Handshake deals have a way of going sideways when the number is bigger than expected.

  • 16
    cool-hare-091

    Honestly? Get the repair estimate first. If it's a number your friend can realistically pay out of pocket in a reasonable timeframe, private settlement is cleaner — no claim on your record, no rate increase conversation. If the shop comes back with a number that would take him three years to pay off, you already know what you have to do. Don't make a decision until you have the actual damage number in hand.

  • 8
    mellow-elk-423

    I'm so sorry, this situation sounds incredibly stressful — especially because it involves a friend and now there's this whole awkward layer on top of the practical stuff. Whatever you decide, please don't let the friendship pressure you into absorbing costs you shouldn't have to. He took your car without asking. That's on him.

  • 11
    tidy-stoat-987

    Genuine question: does your friend actually have the financial means to cover this if it turns out to be serious damage? Like, is this a 'he has savings and will write you a check' situation or a 'he means well but is broke' situation? Because those are very different conversations and it changes what your realistic options are.

  • 12
    clear-beaver-795

    Not legal advice, but since your friend has already verbally acknowledged responsibility, I'd strongly suggest getting that acknowledgment documented in some form before too much time passes — even a text thread where he confirms what happened. Memory gets convenient and stories sometimes shift once real money is on the table. If private resolution falls through, that documentation matters.