The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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steady-dove-615

Got into a minor fender-bender while visiting the US on a foreign driver's license — now what?

Hey everyone, posting this on behalf of my aunt who asked me to help her figure things out because her English isn't great.

She was visiting me here in the States a few weeks ago — flew in from overseas — and she got into a small scrape in a parking garage. She bumped a parked car while backing out of a space in a rental. The other car had a dent and some paint transfer. The police came, wrote up a report, and she got a citation for something like 'inattentive operation' or similar. Nobody was hurt — not her, not anyone else — and the damage looked pretty minor to both vehicles.

She's back home now and obviously stressed about this. She has an attorney back in her home country who handles her business stuff, but that lawyer has no clue how things work over here and is having a hard time getting responses from firms when reaching out cold.

A few things we're trying to figure out:

  • Does she actually need a US attorney for something this small, or can the rental company and insurers just sort it out on their own?
  • Could the citation follow her in any way — like affect future US visa applications or travel?
  • The rental company already charged her card for something. Is that just standard, or should she be pushing back?
  • If she does need local legal help, how does that even work when the client is abroad? Do lawyers handle that remotely?

I know this forum isn't for legal advice — just hoping someone has been through something similar or knows how this stuff generally works. She's not trying to dodge responsibility, she just wants to make sure nothing is quietly hanging over her head.

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11 replies

  • 21
    sharp-seal-780

    Just want to flag — if the other driver decides later that they do have some kind of injury (even weeks after the fact, which happens more than people think), that rental car incident could get complicated fast. The fact that nobody was hurt at the scene doesn't always mean no claim ever comes in. I'd make sure there's some kind of paper trail that the incident is documented and closed properly.

  • 20
    silent-kestrel-874

    I was in a somewhat similar spot — not international, but I was out of state when I had a minor accident and had no idea how to deal with it from a distance. Honestly the rental company stuff was the most annoying part. They charged my card for a 'damage recovery fee' before I even knew what the repair estimate was. Definitely worth disputing that charge if she didn't get documentation first.

    • 2
      calm-traveler618

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 20
    steady-beaver-955

    For something this minor — no injuries, low property damage, and a citation that's basically a traffic infraction — she may not need a full attorney representation. The rental company will typically file a claim through their own insurance or charge the card used at booking. What her home-country lawyer is probably worried about is whether there's any lingering civil liability exposure. That's worth a one-time consult with a local PI attorney just to confirm the coast is clear. Many will do a free or low-cost phone consult, and plenty are used to dealing with clients remotely.

  • 16
    daring-swan-886

    The rental company charge is almost certainly their standard 'loss of use' and damage recovery process — they do it automatically when there's any incident on the vehicle. She should request an itemized breakdown in writing and compare it to whatever the police report noted. I've seen rental companies overcharge or bill for pre-existing damage. Disputing it is totally reasonable and often works.

    • 10
      steady-rider536

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

  • 9
    quiet-bison-755

    Not legal advice, but to answer your question about the citation and visa implications — a minor traffic citation issued to a non-resident visitor is generally a civil infraction and not the kind of thing that flags in immigration/visa systems. That said, it depends on the specific charge and jurisdiction. A quick consult with someone who knows that intersection of traffic law and immigration wouldn't hurt if she's a frequent US traveler. The remote-client thing is totally normal — lots of attorneys handle out-of-state and international clients over video calls.

    • 2
      kind-parent315

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

  • 6
    patient-seal-449

    Three things she should do right now if she hasn't: (1) Get a copy of the police report. (2) Get the rental company's damage claim in writing with line items. (3) Check whether the credit card she used for the rental has travel protection — a lot of them do and it could cover the rental damage claim entirely. People forget about that last one constantly.

  • 3
    bright-elk-120

    Ugh, that sounds so stressful, especially being far away from home when it happened. I'm glad nobody got hurt at least. Hope you're able to get her some clear answers soon — it sounds like she's handling it responsibly.

    • 2
      quiet-rider542

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.