The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Insurancebright-crane-681

Got insurance THIS MORNING. Hit-and-run took out my car THIS AFTERNOON. Is this real life??

I genuinely cannot believe I'm typing this right now.

For the past few months I've been scraping by and let my coverage lapse — life happens, you know? Finally got my finances sorted enough to grab a new policy. Signed up online, got my confirmation email, the whole thing. Policy went active this morning.

Fast forward maybe five hours later. I walk out of my apartment to head to the grocery store and find my car absolutely destroyed in the parking lot. Witnesses told me a driver lost control, clipped a truck parked nearby, and the whole chain reaction just pancaked my car in between two other vehicles. The at-fault driver? Gone. Nobody got a full plate — just a partial and a vague description of the vehicle.

I called the police immediately, they came out, took statements from the witnesses, and filed a report. I have the report number. I also took probably 200 photos of everything — my car, the other damaged vehicles, skid marks, the whole scene.

Now I'm sitting here wondering:

  • Will my brand new insurance policy actually cover this, or will they find some reason to say it "doesn't count" since it just started today?
  • Should I even call them, or will filing a claim immediately tank my rates?
  • Is there any realistic way to track down the hit-and-run driver with just a partial plate?
  • Do I even need a lawyer for something like this, or is it straightforward enough to handle myself?

I'm not injured (that I know of — my neck feels a little stiff but I'm honestly in shock right now). The car might be totaled. This was my only vehicle and I need it for work.

Anyone been through something like this? What's your first move?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 13
    patient-kestrel-085

    Oh my god, I felt my stomach drop reading this. Almost the exact same thing happened to me — I wasn't quite as freshly insured as you but I had just switched carriers and I was terrified the claim would fall through some gap. It didn't. The policy is the policy. If it was active when the damage occurred, you should be covered. Call them. Don't wait.

    • 5
      mellow-overpass986

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 18
    genuine-badger-696

    Please document EVERYTHING before you call your insurance company. Screenshot your confirmation email with the timestamp, save every text or email they sent you showing your effective date and time. Adjusters are going to look hard at a brand-new policy with a same-day claim and they will look for any reason to question it. I'm not saying they'll deny you — I'm saying go in prepared, not naive.

  • 9
    wise-kestrel-934

    Worked claims for years. Same-day policy claims absolutely get flagged for a closer look — that's just standard process, not a personal accusation. They'll verify the bind time vs. the loss time. As long as your policy was active before the incident happened, you have a valid claim. The police report and witness statements are going to be your best friends here. Also, your uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage (if you have it) or collision coverage would be the relevant piece since the at-fault driver fled. Check your declarations page carefully.

    • 1
      quiet-rider659

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 16
    genuine-grouse-849

    Hey — please don't brush off that neck stiffness. Adrenaline after something like this is real, and it can mask pain for hours or even a couple of days. Whiplash especially tends to show up later. Go get checked out, even if it's just urgent care. And make sure whatever you find out gets documented medically now, not a week from now when it's harder to connect it to the accident.

    • 24
      bright-elk-189

      A few practical things to do right now if you haven't already:

      1. Get a certified copy of the police report as soon as it's available — not just the report number. 2. Write down everything you remember about the timeline today: when you bought the policy, when you left your apartment, when you found the car, when you called police. Just in a notes app is fine. 3. Get contact info from any witnesses if you haven't already.

      On the partial plate — local police can sometimes run partials combined with the vehicle description through DMV databases. It's worth following up with the investigating officer specifically about that.

    • 11
      genuine-hare-721

      I'm so sorry, this is genuinely awful. You did everything right — you got covered, you called the police, you documented everything. Please don't be too hard on yourself. I hope the claim goes smoothly and that your neck is okay. Keep us posted.

    • 7
      cool-lynx-771

      What kind of coverage did you actually buy? Like was it just liability or did you get comprehensive/collision too? That matters a lot here since the other driver is gone. Also do you know if your state requires uninsured motorist coverage or if it's optional? Those details are going to determine how this actually plays out.

    • 7
      patient-rider577

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 17
    bright-owl-424

    Not legal advice, but: hit-and-runs with an unidentified driver typically go through your own UM (uninsured motorist) coverage rather than chasing the at-fault party. Whether you have that coverage depends on your policy, so check your declarations page or ask your insurer directly. If your neck stiffness develops into something more serious, that changes the picture considerably — medical injuries and a totaled vehicle together are exactly the kind of situation where a free consult with a PI attorney is worth your time. Most don't charge unless they recover something.

    • 3
      curious-passenger110

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 18
    clever-owl-367

    Call your insurance today. Not tomorrow. Today. The longer you wait, the more it looks weird. You have a police report, you have photos, you have witnesses — you're in a decent position. Just make the call.