The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
Insurancetidy-seal-322

Got hit during a lane merge, had a 9-day insurance gap — now what do I do?

I'm still kind of shaking writing this out so bear with me.

About a week ago I was leaving an industrial park after helping a buddy load some equipment. On the way home I needed to get over a lane on the highway on-ramp. I checked my mirror, signaled, and started moving over — and this SUV that had been way back suddenly floored it and we sideswiped each other. Neither car was undriveable but there was real contact, not just a love tap.

Here's where it gets rough: I had bought a used pickup about three weeks earlier and the insurance I thought I had lined up fell through at the last minute. I was literally in the middle of getting a new policy sorted — had quotes, had picked a company, just hadn't hit 'confirm payment' yet. So yeah. No active policy that day.

Cops showed up, the other driver was loud and animated, and I stayed calm. The officer noted in his report that we were both attempting to merge simultaneously and didn't fully assign fault to either of us. But I still got cited for the insurance lapse, which I completely own.

I'm now insured (finally, ugh), but I'm sitting here wondering what my actual options are. Do I just reach out to the other driver's insurance directly and see what they say? Do I wait and let them come to me? Is there any argument that fault is at least shared here given how fast that SUV came up?

I'm not trying to dodge responsibility but I also don't think this was 100% on me. Anyone been through something like this with a coverage gap involved?

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10 replies

  • 19
    careful-wolf-834

    Not legal advice, but from a legal standpoint the insurance gap and the fault question are separate tracks. The citation for no insurance is its own thing — the accident liability is determined by the facts of what happened on the road. If the police report suggests shared fault, that matters. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney before you say much to anyone on the other side. Many will talk to you for free.

  • 18
    hearty-grouse-236

    This sounds incredibly stressful and I'm sorry you're dealing with it. The fact that you were already in the process of getting insured and this happened in that tiny window is just awful timing. Please don't beat yourself up too much — focus on figuring out the next right step instead of spiraling. You've got options.

  • 10
    gentle-seal-268

    Oh man, the coverage gap thing is brutal. I had a two-week gap between policies once — nothing happened to me during it but I was sweating the whole time. When something actually does happen in that window it must feel like the universe is trolling you. The simultaneous merge situation is genuinely murky legally, so don't assume you're automatically at fault just because you didn't have insurance. Those are two separate issues.

    • 18
      gentle-finch-088

      Do NOT just volunteer information to the other driver's insurance company. Their adjuster is not your friend. The second they hear 'no active policy,' they will use that to paint you as reckless and irresponsible regardless of what the accident report actually says about fault. You have the right to be cautious about what you say and when.

    • 17
      plain-wolf-522

      Former adjuster here. Simultaneous lane merges are legitimately one of the harder fault calls we dealt with — a lot of times it ends up comparative or split. The uninsured status absolutely complicates your position, but it doesn't automatically flip the accident to 100% your fault. The other driver's insurer will push hard on liability, though, because they know you're in a weak spot. Just be aware of that dynamic going in.

    • 1
      tired-survivor519

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 10
    tidy-sparrow-161

    A couple of practical things: get your hands on the full accident report ASAP, not just what the officer told you verbally. Sometimes what's written is more nuanced than what they say out loud. Also document your damages now with photos and timestamps if you haven't already. That stuff matters a lot later when people start arguing about what hit what.

  • 10
    warm-owl-430

    I have a few questions. Did anyone witness the merge besides the two of you? Any dashcam footage from either vehicle? And what exactly did the report say — 'simultaneous merge' is vague. Whether the other driver was already in the lane or still transitioning makes a big difference in how fault gets assigned. The details really matter here.

    • 2
      patient-neighbor990

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

  • 8
    patient-dove-354

    Honestly? Don't call anybody until you've at least talked to a lawyer for a free consult. You're in a vulnerable spot with the insurance gap and it's very easy to accidentally say something that tanks any shared-fault argument you might have. Just pause. One phone call to get oriented costs you nothing.