The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
Car accidentspatient-mole-359

Got rear-ended at a red light — no collision coverage. Am I screwed?

So this literally just happened a few hours ago and I'm still shaking a little tbh.

I was sitting at a red light on my way to work, completely stopped, and out of nowhere I got slammed from behind. The impact pushed me forward like half a car length. The guy who hit me pulled over at least, so there's that.

Here's my situation: I never added collision coverage to my policy because my car is older and I was trying to keep my premiums down. I know, I know. But now I'm staring at a crumpled rear bumper, a messed up trunk that won't close properly, and my neck is already starting to feel stiff.

My questions for anyone who's been through this:

  • Since I obviously didn't cause this (I was stopped at a red light), does the other driver's liability insurance cover my car repairs? Or does the fact that I don't have collision on my end somehow hurt me?
  • I have a dashcam and it caught everything — the impact, the whole thing. How useful is that actually going to be?
  • Is this even worth going through insurance at all, or do people just handle stuff like this privately sometimes?
  • My neck feels off but I don't have any visible injuries. Should I go get checked out even if I feel mostly okay?

I've never dealt with anything like this before and I have no idea what the process even looks like from here. Any advice from people who've actually been through it would be really helpful. Feeling pretty overwhelmed right now.

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

  • 20
    kind-seal-964

    Did the other driver's insurance info check out? Like did you verify the policy was actually active? And was there a police report filed? Those two things are going to matter a lot for how smoothly this goes. Also — any chance the light had just turned or there's any ambiguity in the footage about what was happening? Just asking because 'I was stopped at a red light' is the cleanest scenario but I want to make sure you're covered if the other driver tries to dispute it.

    • 10
      curious-optimist968

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

  • 19
    spry-crow-789

    Go get checked out today, even if you feel 'mostly okay.' I'm not just saying that for legal reasons — whiplash and soft tissue injuries from rear-end impacts genuinely don't always show up immediately. The adrenaline masks a lot in the first few hours. I've seen people feel fine at the scene and then be in real pain 48 hours later. A same-day urgent care or ER visit creates a medical record that connects your symptoms to the accident, which matters a lot down the line.

  • 13
    sharp-wolf-567

    Your dashcam footage is genuinely valuable — preserve it right now, back it up somewhere, and don't let the file get overwritten. As a former adjuster I can tell you that clear liability cases (like a straightforward rear-end at a red light) move faster and with less pushback than disputed ones. The other driver's insurer will likely accept liability pretty quickly once they see the footage and the police report. That said, make sure you actually file a police report if you haven't already. Even if officers didn't come to the scene, you can often file one at your local precinct.

  • 13
    keen-stoat-297

    Not legal advice, but: the absence of collision coverage on your own policy is irrelevant to your ability to recover from the at-fault driver's liability insurance — those are separate things. The dashcam is a real asset. The neck stiffness is something you should document medically as soon as possible. If the other driver is uncooperative or their insurer gets difficult, that's typically when people look into consulting a PI attorney, many of whom work on contingency. But start with the basics first — police report, medical eval, preserve that footage.

  • 12
    patient-newt-346

    A couple of practical things: First, document everything right now while it's fresh — photos of all the damage, the other driver's insurance card, their plate, any witnesses if you got their info. Second, keep a simple notes document on your phone logging how your neck feels each day. If you do end up pursuing any kind of injury claim, that contemporaneous record matters more than people realize. The personal injury process typically starts with a demand to the at-fault party's insurer, and having organized documentation makes that much smoother.

  • 9
    steady-raven-162

    Ugh, I'm so sorry this happened to you, especially on your way to work of all times. Please take care of yourself first — the car stuff can get sorted but your body matters more. Go get that neck looked at. And try not to make any big decisions today while you're still in shock mode. 💛

  • 8
    plain-badger-798

    Please be careful when the other driver's insurance contacts you. They're going to seem super friendly and helpful, and they might offer you a quick settlement or ask you to give a recorded statement. Don't do it. Once you accept anything or say the wrong thing on a recorded call, it can be used to limit what you get later — especially if your neck issue turns out to be something real. Let things play out a little before you commit to anything.

  • 7
    plain-wren-758

    I went through almost this exact thing last year — rear-ended at a stoplight, no collision on my policy. Good news: your own collision coverage doesn't matter here at all. You file against the other driver's liability insurance, not yours. Their policy is what covers your car damage when they're at fault. I was so relieved when I found that out. The process was annoying but I did get my car taken care of.

  • 5
    patient-fox-110

    Short answer: no, you don't need collision coverage to recover from a not-at-fault accident. File the claim against the other driver's insurance, not yours. Use the dashcam footage. See a doctor today. Don't sign or agree to anything without understanding what you're giving up. That's basically the whole playbook for step one.

    • 5
      curious-wanderer705

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

    • 2
      restless-mile-marker249

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?