The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
Car accidentssilent-grouse-588

Got a letter from some collections agency saying I owe money from a crash last year??

Okay so I'm kind of freaking out right now and hoping someone here has dealt with something like this.

About 14 months ago I was in a fender-bender at an intersection. My insurance handled everything at the time — I filed the claim, my adjuster talked to the other driver's insurance, and I thought it was completely done and buried. Never heard another word about it.

Then yesterday I open my mail and there's this letter from some company I've never heard of. It's not an insurance company — it looks more like a collections or recovery agency. The letter says I've been identified as the "responsible party" by the other driver's insurer, that they paid out a chunk of money on their policyholder's behalf, and now they've been assigned to come after me personally for that amount.

They're also dropping hints about my driver's license possibly being suspended and my registration yanked if I don't respond.

Here's the thing — I absolutely had active insurance when the accident happened. My carrier was involved from day one. So why is this random agency contacting me directly instead of going through my insurer?

Is this a scam? Is this legit? Should I call them, ignore them, or call my own insurance company first? The letter has "Subrogation Division" at the bottom which I had to Google because I had no idea what that even meant.

I'm not trying to dodge anything if I actually owe something — I just want to understand what's actually happening here before I do anything that makes it worse.

12replies

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

12 replies

  • 10
    genuine-seal-644

    This happened to me almost exactly. Got a subrogation letter like 16 months after my accident when I thought everything was long closed. Panicked, almost called the collections agency directly — really glad I didn't. First call I made was to my own insurance company and they basically said "yep, we know about this, stop worrying, we handle it." Turned out the other insurer had a right to try to recover money from my carrier, not from me personally. Do NOT engage with that agency before talking to your insurer.

    • 10
      brave-stoat-984

      What you're describing is called subrogation — it's when one insurance company pays out a claim and then tries to recover that money from the party they believe was at fault (or that party's insurer). It's totally legal and pretty common, but here's the key thing: if you had active insurance at the time of the loss, this should be going through your carrier, not you directly. Contact your insurer today, give them the letter, and let them respond. Keep the letter — don't throw it away. And honestly, don't call that agency yourself until you've talked to your insurance company. You could accidentally say something that complicates things.

    • 4
      steady-driver507

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

  • 10
    patient-wren-743

    That stuff about your license being suspended is a pressure tactic, plain and simple. They include that language to scare you into calling them or sending money before you've had a chance to think. These agencies bank on people panicking and paying out of pocket when their insurer would've handled it for free. Don't let them rush you.

  • 22
    spry-stoat-394

    I worked in subrogation for a few years on the insurance side. This is a pretty standard process — insurers routinely assign old claims to third-party recovery agencies when they haven't been able to collect from the at-fault party's carrier. Usually that means there was some kind of breakdown in communication between the two insurance companies, not necessarily that you did anything wrong.

    If you had coverage, your insurer has what's called a "duty to defend" you in exactly this situation. Forward the letter to them immediately. They'll reach out to the agency and sort out who owes what between the two carriers. You personally shouldn't be on the hook for anything out of pocket if you were insured.

    • 7
      weary-driver438

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

    • 7
      level-overpass535

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 17
    kind-sparrow-124

    Three steps: 1) Don't call the collections agency. 2) Call your insurance company today with the letter in your hand. 3) Follow whatever they tell you. That's it. You paid for insurance — make them earn it.

    • 5
      calm-survivor308

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 12
    quick-grouse-412

    Not legal advice, but this is worth saying: the license suspension threat in subrogation letters is real in some states if there's an uninsured judgment against you — but that only applies if you didn't have insurance. Since you did, your carrier is the one that needs to respond to this, not you. If for any reason your insurer pushes back or acts like they don't know about it, you may want a quick consult with a PI attorney just to understand your position. Most will do a free call for something like this.

    • 5
      tired-neighbor821

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

  • 8
    cool-crow-668

    I'd be freaking out too, honestly. But reading through the replies here it really does sound like this is your insurer's problem to solve, not yours. Please update us after you call them — I want to know this works out for you.