The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Insuranceswift-stoat-615

Got hit while running errands for my boss — now I'm in an insurance gray zone, help?

So this happened a few weeks ago and I'm still kind of spinning from it. I was driving my own car to pick up supplies for work — totally on the clock, my manager asked me to do it — when someone ran a red light and plowed into me. Thankfully nobody was seriously hurt, but my car took real damage.

Here's where it gets messy. I reached out to HR to ask whether the company's commercial auto policy would cover any of this since I was literally doing a work errand. They came back and said nope, my personal vehicle isn't covered under their policy. Got that in an email so at least I have it in writing.

Then I called my own insurance and they flagged that my policy has a business-use exclusion — so technically I may not have been covered on my end either. Also got that in writing.

Luckily the at-fault driver's liability insurance is stepping up and covering my repairs and a rental, so the immediate damage situation seems handled. But now I'm terrified to keep using my car for work runs because I feel like I'm driving around in an insurance black hole.

I don't want to go to my boss and say "I can't do supply runs anymore" because honestly I'm worried it could affect my job. There are no company vehicles available — I'd checked into that already.

A few things I'm trying to figure out:

  • Can my employer actually fire me for refusing to use my personal car if I'm not properly insured for business use?
  • Is there some kind of add-on policy I can buy that would cover business errands without replacing my whole regular policy?
  • Should I even bring this up to HR at all, or just quietly sort out coverage on my own?

I feel totally out of my depth here. Anyone dealt with something like this?

14replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

14 replies

  • 18
    quiet-swift-251

    Oh man, I went through almost this exact thing last year. I was making a delivery for my employer in my own truck and got rear-ended. The insurance gap thing is real and it's genuinely scary once you realize it. What I ended up doing was adding what my agent called a 'business use' endorsement to my existing policy — it wasn't crazy expensive and it closed the gap. Definitely call your insurance agent and ask specifically about that. Don't just go through the app or a chat bot, talk to a real person.

    • 17
      steady-wren-973

      The gap you're describing — where neither your personal policy nor your employer's commercial policy covers the use — is actually more common than people think, and most employees have no idea until something goes wrong. The good news is that add-on endorsements for 'business or artisan use' exist specifically for this situation. The bad news is your employer probably knew about this gap and never told you. I'd quietly get your own coverage sorted before you say anything more to HR.

  • 20
    quiet-marten-491

    Whatever you do, be really careful about what you say to your employer's HR going forward. They're not on your side here — they're going to protect the company. If there's any chance a claim could loop back to them, they will find a way to minimize their exposure. Keep everything in writing and don't have hallway conversations about any of this.

    • 12
      clear-marten-263

      Hang onto every single piece of documentation you have — the HR email, the written confirmation from your own insurer, any texts or emails from your manager asking you to do the errand that day. If this ever becomes a bigger issue, that paper trail matters a lot. Also worth noting: the fact that the at-fault driver's insurance is paying out doesn't necessarily mean all your exposure is resolved. There can be gaps in medical coverage, lost wages, etc. that show up later.

    • 9
      tired-walker380

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 16
    hearty-tern-712

    Not legal advice, but the question of whether they can fire you for refusing to use an uninsured personal vehicle for work errands is actually worth a real conversation with an employment attorney — many do free consults. In a lot of states, asking an employee to do something that puts them in legal or financial jeopardy without proper protection gets complicated fast. The fact that you have the coverage gaps documented in writing is genuinely useful.

    • 0
      kind-dreamer481

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 15
    clever-seal-960

    I just want to make sure you're not brushing off any physical symptoms. A lot of people feel okay right after a collision and then start noticing neck or back stiffness a few days later — sometimes longer. Even if you feel fine now, it's worth at least seeing your doctor and getting it on record. Don't wait until something gets worse to mention it.

    • 6
      curious-parent739

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

  • 12
    swift-swan-500

    Here's what I'd do: First, call your insurance agent tomorrow and ask about a business-use endorsement. Second, don't do any more work errands in your car until that's sorted — no matter what your manager asks. Third, don't tell HR you 'refuse' to do it — just say your vehicle is unavailable for a bit while you sort out some maintenance. Buy yourself some time while you figure out the coverage piece.

    • 7
      calm-parent522

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 19
    careful-otter-580

    This sounds so stressful, especially when you were just trying to do something nice by helping out at work. I really hope you're doing okay physically too. Please don't just let this slide — it sounds like your employer kind of dropped the ball by not having a policy in place for employees using personal vehicles on the job.

  • 5
    hearty-stoat-439

    Quick question — did your manager actually put the request to do the errand in writing (text, email, Slack, whatever) or was it just a verbal ask? That detail matters a lot if this ever comes up again. Also, how often have you been doing these kinds of work errands? If it's been a regular thing, that changes the picture a bit.

    • 8
      plainspoken-mile-marker703

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.