The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
patient-crane-710

Got bumped in a parking garage — no visible damage but I have questions about my kid's carseat

So this happened a few days ago and I'm still kind of stewing on it. I was pulling out of a spot in a parking garage and another driver crept forward and tapped my rear end. Couldn't have been going more than 5 mph — it was a tight space and everything was basically at a crawl.

Here's the thing: I looked all over my bumper and I genuinely cannot find a scratch. Zero visible damage. The other driver's insurance already reached out and was actually pretty friendly about it, which almost makes me more suspicious honestly.

A few things I'm trying to figure out:

1. Should I still take my car to a shop and have them look underneath and behind the bumper? I keep reading that bumpers can absorb a hit and look fine on the outside while stuff behind them is actually bent or cracked. And would getting it inspected — even if nothing's found — show up negatively on a vehicle history report?

2. My toddler was in the backseat in her carseat when this happened. I've seen some guidance that says carseats should be replaced after any collision, but other stuff says only moderate-to-severe impacts. Now I'm second-guessing everything. Does anyone know what actually applies here?

3. Neither my daughter nor I felt any pain right after, but my neck has been a tiny bit stiff the last couple days. Could be nothing — could be how I slept. Worth seeing a doctor over?

I don't want to blow this out of proportion but I also don't want to ignore something I'll regret later. Anyone deal with a similar situation?

9replies

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9 replies

  • 9
    tidy-wolf-886

    Almost the exact same thing happened to me in a grocery store lot last year. I skipped the shop visit because there was no damage and honestly kind of regret it — not because anything was wrong, but just because I had no documentation if something had come up later. Definitely get the inspection even if it's just for peace of mind and a paper trail.

  • 12
    kind-heron-615

    Please don't brush off the neck stiffness. Soft tissue injuries — even minor whiplash — can take 24-72 hours to fully show up after a low-speed impact. I've seen patients who felt totally fine at the scene and were miserable three days later. It doesn't mean you're seriously hurt, but get checked by your doctor sooner rather than later and make sure it's documented. Even a 'nothing found' note from your physician is worth having.

    • 19
      gentle-kestrel-051

      Former claims adjuster here. When the other carrier contacts you quickly and sounds super friendly, that's not always a good sign — sometimes it's a strategy to get you to close things out fast before you realize you have more going on. Get your car inspected by a shop YOU choose, not one they recommend. And yes, get that neck looked at before you accept anything or sign anything. Once you settle, it's done.

  • 19
    steady-elk-873

    On the carfax question — a repair or inspection visit doesn't automatically show up on a vehicle history report. What typically gets reported is insurance claims and title events. An out-of-pocket diagnostic visit or even a repair paid directly by the other party's insurance might show depending on how it's processed, but it's not a reason to skip getting your car checked. Protecting yourself matters more than that.

  • 18
    hearty-dove-516

    Carseat — replace it. Full stop. Most manufacturers say any collision, period. And a lot of insurance policies actually cover carseat replacement after an accident, so ask the other carrier about that specifically. Don't pay out of pocket for it.

  • 12
    sharp-crane-252

    Do NOT let them rush you. Insurance adjusters have timelines and settlement targets — your urgency is not their priority, their closing ratio is. Take your time getting the car looked at, get your doctor visit in, and keep records of every single call and email with them. If they start pressuring you to wrap it up quickly I'd take that as a red flag.

  • 19
    silent-owl-361

    Not legal advice, but: low-speed impacts are genuinely tricky because the visible damage (or lack of it) often doesn't reflect what's happening to the occupants' bodies or to hidden structural components. Before you accept any offer or close any claim, it's worth at least having a free consult with a PI attorney just to understand your options. Most won't charge you anything to have a conversation.

  • 12
    tidy-tern-901

    Honestly the carseat thing is what would keep me up at night. Your little one is the priority here. Even if everything turns out to be totally fine, you'll feel so much better knowing you replaced it and had her checked out. Please don't skip that part.

  • 9
    clever-dove-323

    The good news is you caught this early, the other driver didn't flee, and their insurance is already in contact. That's actually a really manageable starting point compared to a lot of situations people deal with here. Just take it one step at a time — car inspection, doctor visit, carseat replacement — and document as you go. You're already asking the right questions.