The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsgenuine-elk-950

Got rear-ended in a state where I don't technically 'live' — is my coverage at risk?

Okay so I'm kind of spiraling right now and hoping someone here has been through something similar.

I work a job that has me bouncing between cities constantly — think long stretches away from my official home address. I keep my car registered and insured back in my home state, where I grew up, where my parents live, and where I genuinely consider 'home.' I'm there multiple times a year.

But I've been crashing at a friend's place in a different state for the past several months for work, and that's where I got hit. Someone ran a red light and clipped the front of my car pretty good. Police came, report was filed, other driver was cited. So far so good on that part.

Here's where I'm panicking: when I called to report the claim, the rep started asking a lot of questions about where the car is 'primarily garaged.' I answered honestly — said I've been spending time in both places — and now I'm terrified they're going to use that to wriggle out of covering me, or worse, accuse me of something fraudulent.

I genuinely never thought about this being an issue. The accident wasn't my fault. My record is spotless. I've had the same policy for years.

  • Is this a common thing insurers try to pull?
  • Can they actually deny my claim over where the car is parked?
  • Should I be worried about any legal exposure here?

I haven't retained anyone yet. Just trying to understand what I'm walking into before this goes further. Really appreciate any perspective from people who've dealt with insurance being difficult after a not-at-fault accident.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 19
    silent-elk-808

    A few practical things worth knowing: insurance policies generally define 'primary residence' and 'principal garaging location' in the fine print, and those definitions vary by carrier. It's worth pulling your actual policy docs and reading that language carefully before your next conversation with them. Also, because the other driver was cited, their liability coverage may end up being the primary source of your recovery anyway — which sidesteps your own insurer's garaging concerns almost entirely. Not legal advice, just stuff I've seen come up in similar situations.

  • 18
    spry-badger-555

    I'm so sorry you're dealing with this on top of recovering from a crash that wasn't even your fault. It really is infuriating that the system makes people feel like criminals for just existing in a complicated way. I hope you get a fair outcome — you deserve it.

    • 0
      grounded-late-shift168

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 17
    gentle-mole-703

    Stop talking to your insurer without knowing exactly what you're going to say first. You already gave them more than you needed to. Write down a timeline of where you've been, how often you go home, why that address is legitimately yours. And the second they use the word 'denial' or 'rescission,' stop the call and get a lawyer on the phone same day.

    • 10
      tired-parent651

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 13
    genuine-marten-283

    Not legal advice, but this fact pattern — not-at-fault, cited other driver, clean record — is generally favorable. The garaging issue is a separate question from liability, and even if your insurer raises it as a coverage concern, you may have remedies depending on your state's insurance regulations. If they start making noises about denying your claim or rescinding your policy, that's the moment to talk to someone who handles insurance bad faith. Don't wait until they've made a formal decision.

    • 8
      steady-parent492

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

  • 12
    quiet-raven-316

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest — the garaging question is more about flagging potential policy misrepresentation than it is about denying a single claim outright. What they're really asking is: did you knowingly list a cheaper-rated address to get lower premiums? If you've always used your genuine home address and you truly do return there regularly, that's a much weaker case for them than if someone flat-out lied. The fact that your work moves you around doesn't automatically make you a fraud case. Document everything — utility bills, bank statements, anything tying you to your home state.

    • 3
      mellow-backseat926

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 8
    daring-crane-472

    Hey — how are you doing physically after the crash? People get so focused on the insurance nightmare (understandably) that they push through symptoms they're dismissing as 'just stress.' Even a low-speed impact can cause soft tissue stuff that doesn't fully show up until a few days later. Please don't skip getting checked out just because the car damage looks minor.

    • 1
      honest-wanderer861

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 6
    warm-marmot-131

    That question about 'primary garaging' is a classic opening move. Adjusters are trained to look for any hook they can use to complicate or delay a payout, especially when the other driver is clearly at fault and they might have to go after that person's insurer. Don't keep volunteering extra information. Answer what's asked, keep it factual, and don't speculate out loud about your own situation.

    • 16
      clear-wolf-595

      I went through something weirdly similar last year — I travel for work constantly and my car technically 'lives' wherever I'm stationed for months at a time. My insurer gave me a headache over almost the exact same thing. What helped me most was being able to show that I never changed my registration or tried to get a different state's cheaper rates. I just... traveled. There's a difference between fraud and having an unconventional lifestyle. Hang in there.