The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Insurancecareful-lynx-614

Got rear-ended in a parking lot — she couldn't find her insurance. Now what?

So this happened yesterday morning and I'm still kind of flustered about it.

I was sitting at a red light near my job when I felt a jolt from behind. Not a massive crash, more like someone rolled into me — but definitely not nothing. I get out and it's a woman in a pickup who was clearly distracted (I saw her put her phone face-down on the seat real fast). There's a visible scrape and what looks like a small dent on my rear bumper, plus some paint transfer.

Here's where it gets annoying: she could not produce her insurance card. Like, at all. She kept saying it was 'on her app somewhere' and fumbling around. I got her license plate, her driver's license number, and her phone number, but I never got a policy number or carrier name. She seemed nervous and kept saying 'let's just handle this between us.'

I filed a police report — officer came out, took both our statements, noted the damage.

Now I'm trying to figure out my next steps:

1. Do I go through MY insurance even though I'm 100% not at fault? I'm worried my rate goes up. 2. Do I wait to see if she actually sends me her insurance info? 3. Is it even worth claiming if the damage might be under a grand to fix?

The car is totally drivable, nothing structural. But the bumper looks rough and it bothers me every time I walk past it. I work two jobs and genuinely cannot be without a vehicle for days while it sits in a shop.

Has anyone dealt with this kind of situation — especially when the other person couldn't provide insurance on the spot? What did you end up doing? 😩

11replies

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11 replies

  • 10
    calm-elk-706

    Ugh, I went through almost this exact thing last year. The other driver gave me her number but her insurance info 'wasn't loading.' What ended up working for me was running her plate through my state's DMV lookup — some states let you do that or the police report will have the registered owner info, which you can use to track down the insurer. Give it a few days but don't wait too long. The longer you wait, the more she can claim the damage wasn't from her.

    • 8
      spry-stoat-580

      Whatever you do, don't let her talk you into a cash settlement between the two of you without knowing what the repair actually costs first. 'Let's handle this privately' is how people end up with a lowball offer and then discover the real fix is way more expensive. Get a real estimate from a body shop first. At least two, honestly.

    • 13
      sharp-fox-974

      Not legal advice, but just so you know — in most states, failing to provide proof of insurance at the scene is itself a violation, and the police report documenting that protects you. If she turns out to be uninsured, your own uninsured motorist coverage (if you have it) would be the path forward. Either way, I'd recommend at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before settling anything informally. Many won't charge unless they recover something.

    • 6
      kind-commuter618

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

    • 5
      plainspoken-mile-marker213

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 17
    wise-beaver-245

    Former adjuster here. A few things: First, the police report is gold — hang onto that. Second, a lot of people don't realize you can actually call your own insurance company, report the accident as not-at-fault, and ask them to help you locate the other driver's carrier without actually opening a claim under your own policy. Adjusters do this kind of carrier lookup regularly. It doesn't automatically trigger a rate increase just to make an inquiry. The increase risk comes when your insurer pays out money on your behalf.

  • 7
    quiet-bison-104

    Please don't ignore your body in all of this. Rear-end impacts, even slower ones, can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't show up until the next day or two — stiff neck, shoulder tightness, headaches. If anything feels off, see a doctor and make sure it gets documented, even if you think it's minor. I've seen people brush it off and then have real problems weeks later with no paper trail.

    • 4
      plainspoken-offramp762

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 10
    cool-bison-252

    Get two body shop estimates TODAY while the damage is fresh and clearly documented. Text her and ask for insurance info one more time in writing so you have a record. If she ghosts you or it turns out she's uninsured, you'll have everything you need to either file under your own UM coverage or take her to small claims. Stop waiting around — time works against you here.

  • 19
    silent-finch-325

    This sounds so stressful, especially when you're already stretched thin with two jobs. You did the right things at the scene though — police report, her info, photos I hope? You're not helpless here even if it feels that way right now. Rooting for you to get this sorted without it costing you anything out of pocket. 💙

  • 14
    genuine-kestrel-579

    Quick question — did the police officer actually cite her for not having insurance, or did they just note it in the report? And do you know if your state requires drivers to carry uninsured motorist coverage? That changes your options pretty significantly. Also, what does your current policy look like — do you have collision coverage or just liability?