The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Insurancecurious-owl-856

Got a demand letter for WAY more than our policy limit after a minor fender-bender. Are we ruined?

I'm honestly shaking writing this. My wife had a low-speed accident in a parking lot a few weeks ago — she tapped the rear bumper of another car while pulling out of a space. The other driver got out, seemed totally fine, was walking around normally, even joked about it with her while they exchanged info. No airbags, no ambulance, nothing. We thought it was just going to be a minor property damage claim.

We just got served with a demand letter. The number on it is over $2 million. For a parking lot tap.

Our liability coverage is $25k. That's it. We're not wealthy people — we rent, we have one car with payments still on it, and we basically live paycheck to paycheck. I have no idea how this number is even mathematically possible when the guy literally walked away from the scene laughing.

I know our insurance is supposed to defend us, and I've already called them. They said they're "reviewing" the claim. But I'm terrified that if this goes to court and a jury awards something huge, we're personally on the hook for everything above our policy limit.

Does anyone have experience with something like this? Did your insurer actually go to bat for you? Is bankruptcy a real possibility here, or are these giant demand numbers just an opening negotiation tactic? I feel sick and can't sleep. Any insight from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

15replies

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15 replies

  • 17
    cool-otter-898

    We went through almost the exact same panic two years ago. Got a demand letter that made us both cry at the kitchen table. Our attorney (assigned by the insurer) eventually told us that these opening demand numbers are almost always inflated way beyond what actually gets paid. In our case it settled for our policy limit and we never had to pay a dime out of pocket. I know that's hard to believe when you're staring at a terrifying number on paper, but try to breathe.

  • 19
    plain-otter-095

    Just a heads up — your insurer has a duty to defend you, but they also have an incentive to protect their own money, not yours. If they can settle for your policy limit and walk away, they will. The scary part is if the claimant refuses to settle within limits and pushes for a verdict above them. That gap can fall on you depending on your state. Make sure you understand whether your insurer has a 'duty to settle' obligation. Don't just trust that they're looking out for you.

    • 8
      tired-survivor346

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 19
    humble-lynx-165

    Not legal advice, but — demand letters with numbers like that are frequently strategic. Plaintiff's attorneys often anchor high to give themselves negotiating room. The fact that your coverage is $25k actually matters a lot here; if you genuinely have no significant assets, a plaintiff's attorney doing a basic background check may conclude there's nothing to chase beyond your policy. Your insurer defending you is standard, but if you're worried about personal exposure, it might be worth a free consult with your own independent attorney just to understand your rights. Not legal advice.

    • 5
      kind-dreamer680

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

  • 10
    swift-hare-625

    I used to work claims for a big carrier. Honest truth: we saw inflated demand letters constantly on low-impact accidents. The first thing we'd do is pull a recorded statement, get the photos, and look at the treatment history — because a lot of these cases fall apart when the medical records don't match the claimed injuries. Your adjuster is going to do the same thing. The $2M number almost certainly won't survive contact with reality. That said, stay in close contact with your insurer and document every conversation.

    • 8
      gentle-driver620

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 19
    gentle-wren-488

    One thing to know: in most states, if your insurer is handling the defense, they're also taking on the responsibility of negotiating within your policy limits. If they refuse a reasonable settlement offer within your limits and then lose big at trial, there's actually a legal concept called 'bad faith' that could make them responsible for the excess judgment, not you. It's worth asking your insurer directly what their current strategy is and getting that answer in writing if you can.

    • 15
      bold-lynx-739

      Here's the practical reality: no attorney working on contingency is going to spend years litigating a case against someone with $25k in coverage and no assets. There's nothing to collect. The most likely outcome is your insurer pays out your policy limit, you sign a release, and it's over. These massive demand numbers exist to scare you and to give the other side room to negotiate down. Stay calm, cooperate with your insurer, and stop Googling bankruptcy lawyers at midnight.

    • 3
      plainspoken-overpass593

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

  • 11
    steady-crane-266

    From a medical standpoint — a low-speed parking lot bump rarely produces the kind of injuries that justify millions in damages. Legitimate catastrophic injury claims involve imaging, surgery, long-term care documentation. If this person's medical records don't show a serious diagnosis, that demand number is going to be very hard to defend in front of a jury or even at mediation. Not saying anyone is lying, just saying the medical evidence matters enormously in how these resolve.

  • 3
    candid-dove-796

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this. That number would terrify literally anyone. Please try not to spiral — you're doing the right things by contacting your insurance and looking for information. You are not alone in this.

    • 10
      weary-dreamer545

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 8
    bright-marmot-547

    What does your insurer actually say when you ask them point-blank about your exposure? And have they assigned a defense attorney to your case yet? The details of how your carrier is responding right now matter a lot more than the demand number itself. Have they acknowledged the claim formally in writing?

    • 2
      careful-rider522

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.