The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
Insurancesilent-newt-919

Got rear-ended by an uninsured driver — now stuck chasing my own deductible back?

So this whole thing has been a nightmare and I'm honestly just venting but also genuinely need advice from people who've been through it.

About six weeks ago I was sitting at a red light and got slammed from behind. Not a tap — full-on collision. The guy who hit me had no insurance. Zero. The police came, wrote everything up, and the report is crystal clear: I did nothing wrong, he was at fault, and he had no valid coverage.

Since he had nothing, I had to go through my own policy using my uninsured motorist coverage. Fine, I get it — that's what it's there for. But my insurer told me I still had to pay my deductible upfront. Couple hundred bucks I really didn't have sitting around, but I paid it because what choice did I have?

Now they're telling me the claim is in "subrogation" — meaning they're going after the at-fault driver themselves to recover what they paid out. And when I asked about getting my deductible back, the rep basically said "we can't promise anything" and moved on.

I did everything right. I had a dashcam. I have the police report. I wasn't at fault by any measure. And now I'm just... waiting to see if I ever see that money again?

Has anyone dealt with subrogation and actually gotten their deductible back? How long did it take? Is there anything I can do to speed this up or protect myself here? Do I need a lawyer just to get back money that should've never been mine to lose in the first place?

Feeling really frustrated and a little lost. Any help appreciated. 🙏

9replies

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9 replies

  • 22
    cool-heron-009

    Ugh, I went through almost this exact thing. Uninsured driver, my deductible, the whole subrogation speech. Honestly it took a long time — way longer than they implied — and I had to keep calling to check on it. Eventually I did get the deductible back but it wasn't automatic. They won't just mail you a check without you staying on top of them. Document every single call you make with dates and what the rep said.

  • 11
    silent-vole-750

    "We can't promise anything" is adjuster-speak for "we're not prioritizing this for you." Subrogation is real, but insurers sometimes drag their feet recovering from uninsured drivers because it's costly for them to pursue and they know you're not going anywhere. Don't let them forget you exist. Be politely persistent — like, call every two weeks and ask for a written status update.

    • 21
      calm-lynx-981

      Not legal advice, but this is worth a 20-minute free call with a PI attorney. The question isn't just whether your insurer can recover — it's whether they have a legal obligation to reimburse your deductible out of whatever they do recover before they keep anything. That varies by state and policy language. Also, if the at-fault driver has any assets or a job with garnishable wages, you might even have the option of suing them in small claims directly for your out-of-pocket. Attorneys who handle auto cases usually do free consults and can tell you fast if it's worth pursuing.

  • 10
    sharp-newt-511

    Worked claims for years. Here's the honest truth: subrogation against an uninsured driver is genuinely hard to collect on because, well, they had no insurance — odds are they don't have easy-to-grab assets either. Your insurer will file, but recovery isn't guaranteed. That said, if they DO recover anything, most states require them to make you whole on your deductible first before they keep the rest. Worth looking up your specific state's rules on that — or asking a PI attorney in a free consult. Not trying to be a downer, just want you to have realistic expectations.

    • 0
      honest-commuter698

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 19
    wise-bison-760

    A couple of things worth knowing: first, check your policy documents for language about deductible reimbursement in subrogation — some policies actually spell out that you get paid back first. Second, most states do have statutes that protect the insured's interest in subrogation recovery. It's not a guarantee you'll collect, but you may have more standing than the rep made it sound. A free consult with a personal injury attorney wouldn't hurt — they can read your policy and tell you pretty quickly where you stand. Not legal advice, just process stuff.

  • 8
    careful-beaver-768

    Three things: (1) Send a written email to your insurer — not just calls — asking for the current subrogation status and timeline. Paper trail matters. (2) Ask them directly in writing whether you get your deductible back first if they recover anything. (3) If the amount is small enough, small claims court against the at-fault driver is a real option — you don't need a lawyer for that. You have the police report and dashcam footage. That's a strong case.

  • 7
    sharp-grouse-304

    Are you physically okay? I know the money stress is real, but please don't ignore any soreness or stiffness that showed up in the days after — rear-end hits can cause soft tissue stuff that sneaks up on you. Get checked out if you haven't already, and make sure anything you're feeling is documented medically. I've seen people brush off symptoms and regret it later. Hope you're doing alright.

  • 14
    brave-elk-803

    This is so unfair. You literally did everything right — had insurance, had a dashcam, called the police — and you're still the one suffering for it. I'm sorry you're dealing with this. Hang in there and please don't let them brush you off. You deserve to get that money back.