The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Car accidentssharp-finch-641

Got rear-ended TWO DAYS after driving my new car off the lot. I want to cry.

I saved up for almost two years for this car. Two. Years. And literally 48 hours after I drove it home I'm sitting here looking at photos of a crumpled rear bumper and a bent trunk lid.

Here's what happened: I was on a four-lane road heading home from work, moving with traffic. Some pickup came flying out of a shopping center exit — no stop, no hesitation — and cut straight across two lanes. I had to brake hard and steer right to avoid getting T-boned. Guy behind me had no time to react and hit me pretty solid. Airbags didn't deploy but there's real visible damage.

Police showed up, wrote up a report, and apparently gave ME a citation — something about unsafe lane movement I think? Even though I was avoiding a collision caused by someone else entirely. The pickup driver who started this whole thing just... drove away before anyone got his plates. I'm so frustrated I can barely think straight.

Now I'm trying to figure out:

  • My new car was added to my existing policy but I haven't gotten the updated insurance card yet — is that going to be a problem?
  • If I got cited, does that automatically mean I'm "at fault" for insurance purposes?
  • Should I fight the citation in traffic court?
  • Is there any way to go after the pickup driver if he's never identified?

I know I need to call my insurer when they open Monday but I just needed to put this somewhere tonight because I feel sick about it. Any advice from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 13
    steady-sparrow-062

    Oh man, I felt this in my chest. Something almost identical happened to me — brand new car, someone else caused chaos, I ended up with the citation. First thing I'll tell you: a traffic citation and insurance fault are NOT the same thing. My insurer did their own investigation and actually found the other driver more at fault even though I got the ticket. Don't assume the citation seals your fate on the insurance side.

    • 22
      hearty-bison-919

      Former claims adjuster here. The updated insurance card thing is almost certainly not an issue — most policies have an automatic coverage period when you add a vehicle, and your insurer's system will show the effective date. Just confirm that when you call and ask them to note it in the file. What I'd flag instead is documenting everything about that pickup truck right now while your memory is fresh: direction it came from, approximate speed, what the driver looked like, any partial plate if you caught even one or two digits. That detail matters more than people realize.

    • 2
      careful-dreamer815

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

  • 9
    brave-seal-047

    Please be really careful when you call your insurer Monday. They're going to ask you to give a recorded statement and it will sound totally casual and friendly. Don't do it yet — or at least don't describe how you 'had to swerve' in those exact words before you've talked to someone who can help you frame what actually happened accurately. Adjusters are trained to pull language out of statements that shifts liability onto you. Just saying.

    • 1
      kind-commuter260

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

    • 5
      weathered-mile-marker892

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

  • 20
    bold-dove-343

    A few practical things worth knowing:

    1. Fight the citation separately from your insurance claim — they run on parallel tracks. Traffic court and your civil/insurance case are different arenas. 2. If you contest the citation and win, that can actually help your insurance picture too. 3. On the unidentified driver — some states allow uninsured motorist (UM) coverage claims even when the at-fault driver is a phantom/hit-and-run, but the rules vary a lot. Check your policy for UM coverage and ask your insurer specifically about phantom vehicle rules in your state.

    Not legal advice, just stuff I've seen come up a lot.

    • 2
      mellow-offramp956

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 9
    quiet-fox-919

    Please go get checked out even if you feel okay right now. Adrenaline masks a lot in the hours right after a crash. Whiplash and soft tissue stuff often doesn't show up until day two or three. If you do have symptoms later and there's no medical record from close to the accident date, it becomes much harder to connect them to the crash. Even an urgent care visit creates a paper trail.

    • 6
      soft-spoken-late-shift295

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

  • 11
    curious-sparrow-302

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the hit-and-run element and the citation together make this messier than a standard rear-end. Whether your UM policy can cover a phantom vehicle, and whether contesting the citation is worth it strategically, are genuinely things worth a free consult with a PI attorney before you make any recorded statements or accept anything from your insurer. Most will talk to you for free. The first 72 hours matter a lot in how these cases get shaped.

  • 16
    patient-dove-766

    I'm so sorry. Two years of saving — that's not just a car, that's a huge deal. Please be kind to yourself tonight. The practical stuff will get sorted but it's okay to just feel awful about this for a minute.

  • 7
    plain-crane-977

    Three things, in order: (1) Don't give a recorded statement to anyone until you know your coverage situation. (2) Take 50+ photos of every inch of that car tomorrow in daylight. (3) Write down a full timeline of what happened while it's still vivid — time, road conditions, exactly what the pickup did, witness info if anyone stopped. Do that tonight before you sleep. Everything else can wait until Monday.

  • 14
    humble-tern-871

    Did any witnesses stick around? Because if it really went down the way you're describing — pickup blows through an exit and causes a chain reaction — that's actually really important for your case and even for fighting the citation. Witness statements can completely change how fault gets assigned. If nobody stopped, did any nearby businesses have exterior cameras facing that stretch of road?