The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insurancecareful-beaver-604

Got rear-ended on the best day of my life — now my insurance rates are unrecognizable

So this is one of those stories that still feels surreal when I tell it.

My partner and I had just finished signing all the paperwork to adopt our first dog — we'd been on the waiting list at a rescue for almost eight months. We were driving home, giddy, talking about dog names, when traffic on the highway just... stopped. We stopped with it. The car behind us did not.

Full-speed rear-end. No braking, no nothing. Our car got pushed into the vehicle in front of us. Airbags, glass, the whole thing. The dog we were supposed to pick up the next morning had to wait another two weeks while we dealt with the aftermath. (She's home now and wonderful, but still.)

Here's where I need some help from people who've been through this:

We had a spotless record — not even a parking ticket between us. The other driver was cited at the scene. Our insurer acknowledged in writing that we were not at fault. And yet, when our renewal came up, the premium was roughly four times what we were paying before the accident.

I've tried shopping around. Every quote I'm getting from other carriers is somehow higher than even that inflated renewal number. It's like the accident is following us everywhere even though we did absolutely nothing wrong.

Does this happen? Is there something that could be miscoded in our record that's making us look like the at-fault party to outside carriers? Should I be requesting a copy of my CLUE report or my driving record from the state to see what's actually in there?

I feel like I'm being penalized for getting hit. Any insight from people who've navigated this would mean a lot right now.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 19
    silent-kestrel-143

    Yes, pull your CLUE report immediately. I went through something similar after a not-at-fault accident and discovered the claim had been coded in a way that made it look ambiguous. Once I got that corrected it took a few months but things started to normalize. LexisNexis runs the CLUE database and you're entitled to a free report — don't skip this step.

    • 17
      quiet-elk-199

      A couple of practical things worth knowing: (1) You can dispute errors on your CLUE report directly with LexisNexis under the Fair Credit Reporting Act — same process as disputing a credit report. (2) Some states have regulations that actually prohibit rate increases for not-at-fault accidents, so it's worth looking up what your state allows. If your state has those protections and your rate went up anyway, that's a conversation worth having with your state's department of insurance. Filing a complaint there costs nothing and sometimes actually moves the needle.

  • 9
    sharp-seal-387

    Former adjuster here. What you're describing is unfortunately pretty common and it's maddening. Even a not-at-fault claim can spike your rates because insurers look at 'loss history' not just fault. You were involved in a claim, full stop, and some carriers' algorithms treat that as a risk signal regardless of who caused it. The CLUE report suggestion above is solid. Also request your motor vehicle report directly from your state DMV — sometimes the issue is there, not with the insurer. If anything is miscoded, dispute it in writing and keep copies of everything.

    • 8
      warm-seal-615

      Just want to ask — how are you and your partner doing physically? A full-speed rear-end can do things to your neck and back that don't fully show up until weeks later. Please don't ignore any lingering stiffness, headaches, or weird nerve stuff. I've seen people brush off symptoms and then really struggle months down the road. Get checked out if you haven't already.

  • 11
    cool-stoat-745

    Don't trust the adjuster's verbal reassurances or even a letter saying 'not at fault.' Get everything in writing with specific policy language. Insurers have a way of waiving something for their purposes while still letting the data flow to third-party databases that other carriers use for underwriting. You're essentially getting double-billed for someone else's mistake.

    • 6
      sharp-heron-040

      Three things: Get your CLUE report. Get your state MVR. File a complaint with your state's department of insurance if the rate hike violates your state's not-at-fault protections. Do all three before you do anything else. Don't just keep shopping quotes blind — you need to know what data is actually out there on you first.

    • 3
      kind-passenger712

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

  • 14
    keen-marten-987

    Not legal advice, but: the rate issue and any personal injury claim you might have are two totally separate tracks. Don't let frustration with the insurance premium situation push you into settling any injury claim quickly just to 'close the loop.' Those are different matters. If you're still having physical symptoms from the crash, that's worth talking to someone about independently. On the rate issue specifically, your state's insurance commissioner office is the right place to escalate if you believe you're being rated incorrectly.

    • 0
      calm-neighbor417

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

  • 3
    quick-otter-553

    I'm so sorry. You were literally just having one of the happiest days and then this. The fact that you're now fighting insurance bureaucracy on top of recovering from a scary crash is just so unfair. Rooting for you (and the pup 🐾).

    • 7
      gentle-commuter889

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 9
    cool-hare-803

    Quick question — did the at-fault driver's liability insurance pay out a claim to you? Sometimes when the other carrier pays a bodily injury or property damage settlement, that event itself gets logged in ways that look bad on your history even though you received the money. Just wondering if that's a factor here because it could change what you need to dispute and where.