The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
Car accidentscool-wolf-957

Got rear-ended while already waiting for a tow after my first crash — two claims now??

So this was genuinely one of the worst days I've had in a long time and I'm still kind of processing it.

This morning I slid on a wet patch coming off an overpass and hit a concrete barrier. Airbags didn't deploy but the front quarter panel was pretty mangled and my tire blew out completely. I pulled as far onto the shoulder as I could and turned on my hazards. Called for a tow, called my insurance, the whole thing.

While I'm standing there waiting — maybe 25 minutes later — a pickup comes around the curve too fast and clips the back of my car. Not a huge impact but definitely not nothing. My bumper is now caved in AND my trunk won't latch properly.

A state trooper was already on the way for the first incident. He ended up documenting both. He told me on the scene these would be treated as two completely separate incidents and that I'd need to handle them independently as far as insurance goes.

Here's where my head is spinning:

  • The first crash was probably my fault (single-vehicle, road conditions)
  • The second one seems clearly on the other driver
  • Do I file two separate claims? Does one affect the other?
  • My deductible — do I owe it twice if I'm going through my own coverage for the first one?
  • Will having two incidents on the same day absolutely destroy my rates?

I haven't even told my parents yet. I'm physically okay, just some soreness in my neck and shoulder. The trooper said I'd get both report numbers within a day or two.

Anyone been through anything like this? I have no idea how to even start untangling this.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 17
    patient-owl-173

    Two things: 1) Don't talk to either insurance company more than you have to until you have both written reports in hand. 2) Given that you have two separate incidents, one of which involves another driver, it might genuinely be worth a free consult with a PI attorney — not because you need to sue anyone, but just so you understand your position before you start making statements. Most of them are free for the initial call.

  • 12
    curious-seal-845

    Just be really careful when the other driver's insurance contacts you about the second incident. They're going to want a recorded statement and they will absolutely try to use the chaos of the situation — "you were already in a disabled vehicle, maybe you contributed" — to reduce what they owe you. Don't give a recorded statement without thinking it through first.

    • 17
      warm-seal-301

      Please don't brush off the neck and shoulder soreness. I know it feels minor right now but soft tissue injuries from impacts — even lower-speed ones — can feel fine for 24-48 hours and then get significantly worse. Go get checked out, even just urgent care. And document everything: when it started, where it hurts, how it affects your sleep or movement. That paper trail matters.

    • 3
      grounded-overpass798

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

  • 11
    genuine-marten-424

    I just want to say — please tell your parents. I know it feels like a lot to deal with but having someone in your corner right now, even just emotionally, makes a huge difference. The insurance stuff will get sorted. Take care of yourself first.

    • 2
      tired-survivor281

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 6
    bright-grouse-556

    Make sure you get BOTH incident report numbers before you do anything else. Some people make the mistake of only following up on one. Also, take photos of both points of damage on your car separately if you haven't already — you want it visually clear which damage came from which incident. That distinction could matter a lot if either claim gets disputed.

  • 6
    daring-mole-019

    Quick question — did the trooper actually write up the second driver, or just document that a second impact happened? Because there's a difference between "documented" and "cited at fault." If the other driver wasn't cited, their insurer is going to push back harder. What did the trooper actually say about fault on that second one?

  • 5
    gentle-fox-972

    Oh man, I had a double-incident situation once (nothing as wild as yours, but still two claims close together) and yes — they are handled completely separately. Two claim numbers, two adjusters sometimes, two processes. It's exhausting but it's actually kind of cleaner than it sounds because the liability picture is different for each one. Hang in there.

    • 13
      cool-stoat-161

      Worked claims for years. Here's the real breakdown: the first crash (single vehicle) goes through your own collision coverage, so yes, you'd owe your deductible for that one. The second crash — if the other driver is clearly at fault — you'd file a liability claim against their insurance. If their insurer pays out, you typically don't owe a deductible at all for that portion. The two claims don't really "talk to each other" from a coverage standpoint. Rate impact is a separate question and honestly depends heavily on your carrier and your state's rules.

    • 1
      tired-dreamer307

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.